The Rise and Fall of Digital Art

The pandemic months and the immediate aftermath accelerated what many had long predicted yet few truly expected: a seismic, if brief, upheaval in the market for innovative art. Confined to their homes, collectors and gallerists pivoted to the digital sphere, creating a stage where untested talent could, in theory, flourish beyond the constraints of tradition. But like so many booms born in the shuttered days of cultural life, this surge proved both fleeting and illusory. The feverish demand that propelled emerging artists to dizzying heights has now ebbed, exposing the market’s unyielding habit of returning to the familiar, merely disguised as novelty.

That moment, now receding in the rearview, reflected less a genuine leap in artistic quality than a symptom of the art market’s enduring structural realities. Contemporary art has long lived in paradox, championing innovation while bowing to the imperatives of liquidity and investment security. As a result, a new generation of artists remains suspended in a precarious limbo: too fresh to command institutional authority, too volatile to promise financial return. The pandemic’s digital interlude, far from dismantling hierarchies, recast them, replacing the intimacy of physical salons with algorithmic gatekeepers whose criteria for visibility tilt toward spectacle over substance.

The irony is sharp: a sector built on aesthetic risk now finds itself hostage to the metrics of digital capitalism, where platforms engineered for engagement reward art that dazzles or shocks over work whose meaning unfolds slowly. In this environment, the very ambition to innovate can reduce art to little more than a distraction, a commodity quickly consumed and forgotten.

The recent market retreat is more than a correction; it is a pointed reminder of the deep tension between the unhurried rhythms of art and the market’s relentless impatience. What once shimmered as a radiant digital utopia for emerging talent now reads as a mirage. The brutal calculus endures: visibility is transient, attention is scattered, and institutional backing remains indispensable. The old hierarchies have not fallen; they have merely evolved.

Yet this is not a nihilistic epitaph for creative innovation. On the contrary, it sharpens the imperative to reimagine the frameworks that sustain it. The real challenge lies in building spaces, both critical and commercial, where emerging artists can endure beyond the dictates of market logic. Such a project demands patience, depth, and a refusal to equate value solely with novelty.

The pandemic’s artistic bloom was dazzling but short-lived, a glimpse of what a democratized, fluid ecosystem hungry for new forms might have been. Its abrupt end laid bare an enduring truth: the art market is less a meritocracy than a mirror of broader cultural and economic forces. The rise and fall of experimental creative forms remains a cautionary tale about the limits of digital disruption and the resilience of entrenched hierarchies cloaked in the rhetoric of innovation.

Any future in which art genuinely earns the mantle of innovation will depend less on the market’s fleeting whims and more on a shared commitment to cultivation over consumption, a commitment as intellectual as it is financial. Only then might the market’s surgical spotlight give way to the steady glow of a true artistic ascent.

Math Art: New Arrivals 2023

Galois Automorphism
Oil on canvas
80 cm x 60 cm

Price: 3.418 EUR Sold

In geometry, this is a type of bijective map that preserves the algebraic structure of a field. Here is the process observed through the movement of triangles in parallel planes. Galois automorphisms are important in Galois theory, which is a branch of algebra that examines the relationship between field extensions and groups.

Hilbert’s Twenty-First Problem
Oil on canvas
50 cm x 70 cm

Price: 3.294 EUR Sold


The parallel postulate, which is related to Hilbert’s 21st problem, is often used in the study of triangles to prove results such as the sum of the interior angles of a triangle.

Euler’s Inequality
Poncelet’s Porism

Oil on canvas
70 cm x 50 cm

Price: 3.162 EUR
Price: 3.173 EUR
Sold

Euler’s inequality is a fundamental result in geometry that applies to triangles where the sum of the squares of the lengths of the sides of a triangle is greater than or equal to four times the square root of three times the area of the triangle.

According to Poncelet’s porism, if two triangles are such that each has an incircle that is tangent to all three sides of the triangle, then any circle that is tangent to one of the triangles’ incircles is also tangent to the other triangle’s incircle.

These works are a part of the math-art project “The Power of a Triangle”. The triangle is the only plane figure described by a finite number of straight-line segments where all dots are directly connected. Out of all polygons, only a triangle is always rigid.


Eight on the Eights

It’s time to go back to galleries.

There are eight months left before the end of the year, so I will have eight exhibitions. Every eighth of the month. In eight cities.

My last exhibition was on February 8, 2020, and there have been no further gatherings since then.

Lockdowns have been a time of creativity, and the NFT has opened the door to a whole new world that has finally brought justice to artists.

Hopefully this has been a lesson for gallerists and that the relationship between the artist and the gallery owners will change because I guess we’ve finally figured out who needs who.

Meanwhile, many gallery owners have been highly negative about our willingness to pay expensive gas fees on NFT platforms. Let’s hope they can learn from it.