My digital abstract art process

This page outlines my digital abstract art process — how I work, why I work, and the values that hold it together.

I didn’t choose abstraction — it chose me.

My artistic practice began where space was missing: no studio, no canvas, just a screen and the need to keep creating. Over time, this constraint became a language.

I work with fragments, density, rhythm, and silence. Each work is an attempt to hold what slips away — to name the invisible, without fixing it. The digital surface is not cold to me; it’s a sensitive space, open to hesitation.

In a time of speed and polish, I value tension, doubt, and slow attention. This page is not a biography. It’s a set of principles. A way to remain consistent in an age of noise.

This digital abstract art process allows me to explore not only composition and texture, but also the emotional resonance of fragmented form.

Manifesto: Consistency and the digital abstract art process

My digital abstract art process involves working in fragments — not because the whole escapes me, but because I no longer trust it. I believe in forms that resist perfection, in gestures that remain unfinished, in surfaces that carry tension, and in images that breathe silence.

I reject polish for its own sake. I reject speed disguised as vitality. I reject the algorithm’s appetite. An artwork should not scream to be seen. It should draw you in — quietly, insistently — like something familiar you’ve never truly looked at.

I claim the right to time. To slowness, to wandering, to doubt. I commit to rigor — not the rigidity of rules, but the ethics of attention. I do not follow style; I follow necessity. I follow the weight of what must be done, even when it makes no noise.

My process is my place. Not a studio, but a state. A room made of questions, lit by constraint. I choose to work with limitation, with stillness, with unresolved beauty.

I believe abstraction can hold memory. That repetition can heal. That the screen is not the opposite of the sacred.

I do not owe clarity. But I owe care. And I owe consistency — not in appearance, but in intention. Every piece I make, even the ones that fail, is part of a longer thread. A living grammar. A promise to myself.

Non-Negotiables in my digital abstract art process

Artistic commitments in digital abstract art

  • A defined visual voice. I don’t follow trends or try to please. Each piece must carry my signature, even as the style evolves. Change is welcome — dilution is not.
  • Intention before execution. I create because something stirs me — a tension, a feeling, a question. I do not produce to meet quotas or feed the algorithm.
  • Experimentation as a principle. I allow detours, doubt, and even derailment. The work should never feel predictable. It must remain alive.
  • A constant demand for formal precision. I respect the internal laws of the image — balance, rhythm, density, silence. Even abstraction requires structure.

Ethical values in my digital abstract art process

  • Respecting my own pace. I reject the cult of productivity. Long pauses, boredom, repetition — they are part of the process.
  • Integrity in collaboration. I only work with people or institutions who respect my time, my values, and my artistic voice.
  • Authenticity in all I share. I don’t pretend to be an artist — I build my practice from within. What I show and what I sell must align.

Practical pillars of a digital abstract art practice

  • Creation comes before communication. Studio first. Social media second. My creative flow must never depend on visibility metrics.
  • Keeping a working journal. Thoughts, sketches, failures, unfinished pieces — everything documents the path. Even silence leaves a trace.
  • Naming what I make. Every piece, every series, every step deserves a name. Naming brings clarity and builds coherence over time.

Learn more about this approach through the Ethereal Solid series on this site, or explore foundational concepts behind abstraction at Tate Modern.