"Roots" → 5 generated pieces curated by Fellowship team member @_nataliesosa ☝️ The ISG collection is now live, and it includes a piece that functions as a live artwork generator: “Roots.” I spent some time exploring and curating the outputs that stood out to me. Today, I’m sharing five more of my favorites, connecting them to real landscapes. 1- For me, this piece strongly evokes a waterfall. It translates the logic of a natural landscape: the edge of a cliff, the fall of water, and the spreading mist, into a language of lines and generative marks. And I love it.
2- This one reminds me of a tree called Angel Oak in South Carolina. Both share a branching structure, no? In the tree, this structure is physical. In the artwork, it is translated into lines and patterns generated through a system.
3- This one definitely reminds me of The Wave, Arizona, USA. I’ve never visited it, I’ve only seen it a million times because it’s such a famous landscape, one of those Apple-wallpaper kinds of places. Both images share a strong sense of rhythm and direction. The forms move horizontally and curve around a central point.
4- In this artwork, repeated marks accumulate in the center, producing forms that resemble deposits or some kind of erosion. This is in Hierve el Agua- Oaxaca, Mexico.
5- This one feels very similar too, doesn’t it? Both images share the same visual logic: many small paths forming a larger network. In the photograph, this network is created by water moving through the land. In the artwork, it appears through repeated marks.
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