Servers Series
Servers is an ongoing body of work that examines the porous relationship between image, data, and embodiment. Each piece operates as both surface and conduit—a node in a wider system of transmission. The works draw from the visual debris of digital culture: compressed files, algorithmic distortions, and chromatic noise. These are reprocessed into painterly abstractions that mimic the language of reproduction while questioning its conditions.
The term server is used both literally and metaphorically. It suggests the unseen infrastructures that sustain our visual exchanges and the submissive position of the image itself—constantly accessed, reformatted, and displaced. In this sense, the series continues my interest in Abstract Psychofigurism: forms that appear sentient yet fractured, oscillating between identity and dissolution.
By outsourcing production to print-on-demand systems, each work undermines traditional ideas of authorship and scale. The collector or exhibitor becomes implicated in determining the object’s material limits. This distributed mode of creation turns the artwork into a protocol—an open field of reconfiguration rather than a fixed artifact.
Title: Server 01
Year: 2025
Series: Servers
Medium: Print-on-demand digital pigment work on canvas
Dimensions: Variable (determined by owner)
Edition: Open protocol edition
Description:
The first conceived work from the Servers series, Server 01 establishes the visual and conceptual architecture for the project. A field of clustered forms—part planetary, part neural—emerges through dense pixel interference. The work evokes both organic growth and digital compression, its textures oscillating between data noise and painterly gesture.
Server 01 situates abstraction as a site of psychological and informational overflow. Its shifting format, dependent on the collector’s decision, reinforces the work’s systemic logic: scale becomes a form of interpretation, and ownership an act of participation.
Price: Variable (print-on-demand edition)
Title: Server 02
Year: 2025
Series: Servers
Medium: Print-on-demand digital pigment work on canvas
Dimensions: Variable (determined by owner)
Edition: Open protocol edition
Description:
The second work in the Servers series, Server 02 shifts from abstract field to fragmented portraiture. A spectral face, veiled in chromatic interference, emerges through layers of digital noise and compression. The image appears both human and synthetic—an archetype of the “served” subject, endlessly processed by data systems.
Through its pixel disruptions and optical distortion, the work reflects on identity as a mediated construct, distributed across screens and formats. Like the rest of the series, it exists as an open file—its material presence defined by whoever activates the print.
Price: Variable (print-on-demand edition)
Title: Server 03
Year: 2025
Series: Servers
Medium: Print-on-demand digital pigment work on canvas
Dimensions: Variable (determined by owner)
Edition: Open protocol edition
Description:
In Server 03, the Servers series moves toward painterly distortion. A fragmented face—half-obscured behind reflective glass—appears to dissolve into a chromatic fog. The surface evokes both heat and memory: analogue film tones merging with digital compression.
The work continues the series’ meditation on mediated identity and reproduction, where each print becomes a renewed iteration—never fixed, always in process. Viewers encounter a portrait that flickers between subject and signal, intimacy and erasure.
Price: Variable (print-on-demand edition)
Title: Server 04
Year: 2025
Series: Servers
Medium: Print-on-demand digital pigment work on canvas
Dimensions: Variable (determined by owner)
Edition: Open protocol edition
Description:
Server 04 closes the series with a spectral visage dissolving into layered digital interference. The portrait’s surface ripples like liquid code, fusing skin, data, and distortion. Hints of warmth—rosy hues and soft chromatic veils—contrast with the cold precision of the pixel, blurring the line between portrait and signal.
The work embodies the Servers series’ central question: how identity circulates through image systems that reproduce endlessly without origin. Each print becomes both a record and an error, carrying traces of the self as it mutates across screens and surfaces.
Price: Variable (print-on-demand edition)