Frank Ferrer's essential integration between easel art, photography and digital manipulation concurs in his work, where his style is characterized by the use of elements from nature, which he abstracts, reinterprets and digitizes to compose - through multiple design resources - visual poems that open spaces for interpretation and emotional impact to the observer. He is one of the forerunners of digital art in Panama and definitely one of its most complex and purposeful exponents.
Re Evolution represents Frank’s desire to delve into the intimate and the universal has led him to approach fractal geometry and try to emulate the complex processes of accumulation and superposition of structures, somewhat independent, but also part of a larger whole. In this way, Ferrer operates with matrices, colors, and shapes that gradually and organically multiply, forming layers and layers on the screen. With the elements at his disposal and exhausting all his possibilities, he tries to suggest what he perceives of the world through his reason and his intuition: the constant wonder of the natural processes of a universe in its incessant struggle against the entropy; a universe to which the infinitely complex human being also belongs, after all.
Re Evolution - Singularity Series
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Re Evolution - Singularity Series
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Frank Ferrer's essential integration between easel art, photography and digital manipulation concurs in his work, where his style is characterized by the use of elements from nature, which he abstracts, reinterprets and digitizes to compose - through multiple design resources - visual poems that open spaces for interpretation and emotional impact to the observer. He is one of the forerunners of digital art in Panama and definitely one of its most complex and purposeful exponents.
Re Evolution represents Frank’s desire to delve into the intimate and the universal has led him to approach fractal geometry and try to emulate the complex processes of accumulation and superposition of structures, somewhat independent, but also part of a larger whole. In this way, Ferrer operates with matrices, colors, and shapes that gradually and organically multiply, forming layers and layers on the screen. With the elements at his disposal and exhausting all his possibilities, he tries to suggest what he perceives of the world through his reason and his intuition: the constant wonder of the natural processes of a universe in its incessant struggle against the entropy; a universe to which the infinitely complex human being also belongs, after all.