
Trajectory
When I have the opportunity to visit contemporary art exhibitions, I am far more attracted to non-figurative works.My attempts at abstraction, on the other hand, can be counted on the fingers of one hand, with fingers to spare.
Many of the images on this page are non-figurative, even though the temptation to evoke something is always strong. What they have in common is the technique used. I don’t think it’s necessary to dwell on how images of this type can be obtained, as it would be a very long and inevitably boring description. In short, they could be defined as “parametric images”.
Machine translation from Italian with DeepL.










































See also:

Shadow theory
The series of images depicted in this page refer, in certain aspects, to those school memories related to the study of descriptive geometry.

Turbulence
Today an iron will wipes out the air, tear the shrubs, overwork the palm trees, and dig big indented grooves in the pressed sea.

Simulacrum
For a change, geometry nodes and procedural materials from Blender are technically the basis of these images.

Dwarfs and Giants
The metaphor of the dwarf who sees farther than the giants of the past, by climbing on their shoulders, has been evoked many times.

Filters
What is special about the digital effects applied to these images is that they were created with Blender, a well-known open source 3D software.
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