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Tychist Object 016
Against absolute black void, countless luminous particles form a near-spherical cloud of breathtaking density and symmetry. At the precise center, a searing magenta-pink core radiates the highest concentration of points, exploding outward in a brilliant radial burst before gradually thinning into a soft, spherical halo.
Individual particles glow in a vivid, high-contrast palette: electric cyan, hot magenta, bright lime green, deep violet, vivid orange, and occasional sapphire blue. The color gradient transitions smoothly from the hottest, densest magenta-pink nucleus through cooler cyan-green mid-regions to sparser violet-orange periphery—creating the illusion of temperature, density, and energetic outflow.
The overall form is almost perfectly spherical yet subtly asymmetrical: a faint vertical elongation along the central axis suggests rotational axis or directed emission, while the particle distribution thins dramatically toward the edges, dissolving into isolated specks against the black field. No hard boundaries exist; the cloud simply fades into nothingness, evoking infinite expansion suspended in a single frozen instant.
Notice how the radiant magenta core pulls the eye irresistibly inward to maximum density and heat, then propels it outward along countless radiating streams of colored points—creating relentless rhythmic tension between gravitational convergence and explosive dispersal, singularity and cosmos.
A standalone digital work extending themes from the Tychist Objects series, this piece channels algorithmic chance and particle-system emergence to visualize cosmic birth: not representational astronomy but primal force made visible—pure energy condensing, radiating, and scattering in ecstatic symmetry.
How does this radiant explosion of colored points against perfect black stir your sense of origin, infinite scale, or the quiet poetry of matter and light being born from nothing in one breathless instant?
Technical notes.
Inkjet print on paper. 10” H x 8” wide. Signed by the artist on the back. Open edition. Frame not included.
Against absolute black void, countless luminous particles form a near-spherical cloud of breathtaking density and symmetry. At the precise center, a searing magenta-pink core radiates the highest concentration of points, exploding outward in a brilliant radial burst before gradually thinning into a soft, spherical halo.
Individual particles glow in a vivid, high-contrast palette: electric cyan, hot magenta, bright lime green, deep violet, vivid orange, and occasional sapphire blue. The color gradient transitions smoothly from the hottest, densest magenta-pink nucleus through cooler cyan-green mid-regions to sparser violet-orange periphery—creating the illusion of temperature, density, and energetic outflow.
The overall form is almost perfectly spherical yet subtly asymmetrical: a faint vertical elongation along the central axis suggests rotational axis or directed emission, while the particle distribution thins dramatically toward the edges, dissolving into isolated specks against the black field. No hard boundaries exist; the cloud simply fades into nothingness, evoking infinite expansion suspended in a single frozen instant.
Notice how the radiant magenta core pulls the eye irresistibly inward to maximum density and heat, then propels it outward along countless radiating streams of colored points—creating relentless rhythmic tension between gravitational convergence and explosive dispersal, singularity and cosmos.
A standalone digital work extending themes from the Tychist Objects series, this piece channels algorithmic chance and particle-system emergence to visualize cosmic birth: not representational astronomy but primal force made visible—pure energy condensing, radiating, and scattering in ecstatic symmetry.
How does this radiant explosion of colored points against perfect black stir your sense of origin, infinite scale, or the quiet poetry of matter and light being born from nothing in one breathless instant?
Technical notes.
Inkjet print on paper. 10” H x 8” wide. Signed by the artist on the back. Open edition. Frame not included.