About the Artist
Biography
The Galois Connection charts new visual lexica, mapping diagrammatic and representational forms.
Her art explores the implicate order relating microscopic to macroscopic, local to global, interior to exterior, open to closed, and quantum to cosmic.
It searches for a universal language mediating the levels of both conscious thought and physical supervenience.
The Galois Connection uses digital and generative media to juxtapose abstract mathematical constructions against concrete elements of glitch, collage, and video art.
She is inspired by the seemingly trivial that yet persistently defies dismissal.
Her visual influences include the cryptoart community, Wassily Kandinsky, Piet Mondrian, Kazemir Malevich, Neil Spiller, Annie Besant, Mark Rothko, Vera Molnár, Camille Utterback, Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Lynch, Auguste and Louis Lumière, Michel Gondry, Dave Free, and J. Russell Huffman.
Statement
My central thesis as an artist is that the creative impulse of the auteur is driven by an algebraic vision of the possible relationships between future works in their portfolio.
I'm a conceptual artist at core, using digital and generative media as affordances for the audience; however, the media is more than merely a means to an end: each piece is crafted to function as an element within such an algebraic portfolio of work.
My style as an artist is driven by the media and tools in front of me; however, I do more than simply play the hand I'm dealt: I use each hand to investigate the combinatorial aesthetics of the deck itself in order to reverse-engineer new creative games.
The piece Inside the Black Box exemplifies my unique vision, combining techniques from collage and glitch art with AI-generation, and employing both abstract and representational forms, in order to evoke the latent space of generative Artificial Intelligence.
My philosophy as an artist is influenced by the thought of Kazemir Malevich, Neil Spiller, Ramón y Cajal, Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, David Lynch, Cornel West, Douglas Hofstadter, David Bohm, Graham Harman, Wilhelm Worringer, Jaques Derrida, Franz Kafka, Donna Haraway, Albert Camus, Kurt Vonnegut, and Bruno Bettelheim.
A forthcoming series of collections will use the concepts and principles of quantum entanglement and decoherence to explore the central theme of human connection from the emotional perspectives of love, loss, trust, intimacy, and awe.