BEACH BLOOM
A unique artwork born from Danish beaches, transformed through waves—both natural and artificial. This piece is part of the Beach Bloom project, a self-sustaining automated art system that transforms physical beach stones into infinite unique digital artworks. Each image is a one-of-a-kind creation (edition of 1) that will never be reproduced. What makes this artwork unique: Generated from 3D-scanned Danish beach stones collected at coordinates 55.400415, 12.330860 Created through a multi-stage industrial process combining analog drawing, 3D printing, and AI diffusion.
functionScanLandscape
functionScanLandscape is a computational artwork that processes landscape through digital translation cycles. Using 3D scanning at GPS coordinates 55.400415, 12.330860 in Køge Bay, Denmark, organic beach formations are captured as data, 3D printed as geometric objects, then returned to their origin point as temporary installations.
The project explores how digital tools mediate our relationship with natural environments. GPS navigation, satellite imagery, and computational processing fundamentally alter landscape experience. By creating a closed loop between physical capture and digital return, the work makes visible these normally invisible technological processes.
The black and white photography intentionally manipulates scale, creating images that could be microscopic or satellite views. This ambiguity reflects how we increasingly experience landscapes through screens rather than direct contact.
The accompanying video features AI-generated narration structured as programming functions, blending technical language with poetic description to examine artificial intelligence's role in environmental documentation.
project details: here
Semi-automated crop field drawings
Semi-automated crop field drawings is a series of 16 penplotter drawings exploring the intersection of agricultural machinery, landscape geometry, and automated production. Each drawing exists in an edition of 64, creating a deliberate dialogue between digital reproduction and the mechanical patterns found in modern farming practices. The drawings originate from aerial photographs of crop fields along the route from Copenhagen to Roskilde, documenting the first 48 kilometers of a longer journey through Denmark's cultivated landscapes. The production process mirrors contemporary farming methods. Using Rhino 3D software, field perimeters are manually traced, while a custom Grasshopper script generates tractor-like patterns across the landscape.
project details: here