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  • Alchemist’s Study is a series realized by image synthesis where a text prompt “imaginary workspaces electrostatic” produced an image which then diverged and mutated resulting in a sequence of variations similar to genetic evolutionary processes.
  • Anamorph-Voronoi, is an image-generating software designed to produce aesthetically coherent compositions in 3D volumetric space according to visual rules translated into computer code. Inspired by the historian Jurgis Baltrusaitis’ study of
  • Imaginary Workspaces is a series inspired by dystopian science fiction narratives as written by Stanislaw Lem and Philip K. Dick that imagine fictional industrial workspaces. This collection of invented images oscillate between retro futuristic
  • “On the Road”, consists of twelve lenticular panels that explore the cinematic narrative potential of the photographic image in non-electronic form. The exhibition’s title “On The Road” makes reference to the defining work of the Beat Generation’s
  • Refraction
    "Refraction" explores the cinematic narrative of the photographic image in a non-electronic form, the lenticular medium, a process in which two or more images can be seen sequentially simply through the changing of the observer’s viewing
  • Virtual 3D Library for the University of KonstanzArtist: Daniel RihaComment:
  • Multimedia Part of Permanent Exhibition in Jan Hus Museum, Konstanz, GermanyArtist: Daniel RihaComment:
  • Two Trees
    The video of this work was captured in a field outside of Oregon, Wisconsin using a Mavic 2 Pro drone. The two trees in this piece have for years been a source of delight when entering into the town of Oregon while visiting my daughter. I had
  • We are Stardust -
    I received an invitation to work with the NASA Spitzer Space Center at CalTech in 2008 to realize an installation project for the exhibition OBSERVE held at the Art Center of College of Design in Pasadena. Following discussions and presentations by
  • The November 1973 issue of Scientific American featured an article titled “The Recognition of Faces” by Bell Labs researcher Leon Harmon that explained how we perceive pixelated digital photographic images. Using a low-resolution, portrait of