Trajectories

his collection started as an experiment for Genuary 2023—a month-long challenge where artists and coders create generative art based on a different prompt each day. One of those prompts was “Signed Distance Functions,” which inspired the foundation of this work. I developed a generative system in JavaScript in which small elements—light rays, particles, or maybe bullets—travel through space and interact with mathematically defined shapes. These objects exist as invisible boundaries in the environment, influencing the movement, scattering, and reflection of everything that passes by.

The resulting images capture frozen moments in those simulations. Paths bend, fragment, pulse, or collide. Each image is a dense field of movement—sometimes geometric, sometimes organic. The shapes formed by the interactions suggest magnetism, energy flows, microscopic structures, or even traces of violence. Yet there's also something meditative in the repetition, the layering, the density of the marks.

Some works feel like a close-up of a physical phenomenon; others evoke cellular growth, architectural blueprints, or abstracted explosions. But all share the same generative DNA. I only define the rules that place and define the objects—but the paths trace themselves. I don’t know what will emerge until I step back and look.

These works are available as high-resolution giclée prints on archival paper, preserving the crispness, subtle gradients, and fine detail of the digital compositions.

Trajectories is about invisible forces and visible consequences. About systems with rules, and the unexpected beauty that arises when something is simply allowed to move.