
Cybernauts
A serial net-art project examining consent, machine judgement, behavioural identity, and what it means to become legible to computational systems.
View complete project pageThe archive is ordered chronologically, newest to oldest. Use the filters to narrow the work by medium or project type without separating earlier projects from the rest of the practice.

A serial net-art project examining consent, machine judgement, behavioural identity, and what it means to become legible to computational systems.
View complete project page
A parafictional Cold War surveillance system built from a physical device, an AI-generated documentary, a synthetic archive, and a live monitoring apparatus.
View complete project page
A synthetic Cold War monitoring film becomes an operational image when live visitors and recorded footage appear inside its screens.
View complete project page
A fabricated 1990s documentary constructs an authoritative history for a Cold War surveillance device that never existed.
View complete project page
A series of framed charcoal portraits and directional sound works developed through an iterative collaboration between a human artist and an AI collaborator.
View complete project page
Live network-camera streams and AI-generated imitations merge into an unstable broadcast in which the viewer cannot reliably separate observation from fabrication.
View complete project page
A domestic propaganda installation built around custom telescreen objects that inform, observe, and condition their audience.
View complete project page
Portraits of social-media leaders examine concentrated technological power through the visual language of authority, mythology, and propaganda.
View complete project page
Portraits emerge only under ultraviolet light, linking visibility, identity, and the hidden sorting mechanisms of algorithmic systems.
View complete project page
A global collection of images gathered from publicly accessible network cameras during the pandemic and its aftermath.
View complete project page
An immersive response to mass surveillance, public video chat, facial recognition, and the persistence of supposedly ephemeral online communication.
View complete project page
Public video-chat encounters are disrupted, printed, and preserved, exposing the persistence of images that participants may have experienced as temporary.
View complete project page
A coded portrait considers secrecy, the Five Eyes alliance, and the concentration of unseen authority.
View complete project page
An early installation examining digital identity, state surveillance, hidden communication, and the uneasy position of the viewer as both observer and observed.
View complete project page
Early personal computers are photographed as cultural objects carrying both the promise of private creative space and the origins of networked exposure.
View complete project page
Deliberately corrupted images examine how expectation, bias, and prior experience shape what appears visually coherent.
View complete project page