Everyone is asking whether AI is killing creativity. I think many are asking the wrong question.
You are looking at 85 years of daily global temperatures transformed into art. Not plotted on a chart. Not generated by a prompt. Each of the 30 pieces interprets the same numbers through a different algorithmic lens. You can feel the shift without reading a single number.
People ask if these are AI-generated. They're not.
I built my own tool (25,000 lines of Rust code), running custom algorithms with an interactive interface that lets me experiment and shape each visualisation by hand. It's an application I designed specifically for this purpose.
But AI was essential. Not in making the art, but in building the instrument that I want to play. AI was my collaborator in architecting, designing, and coding an application that would normally take years and a team of specialists. I understand code, but this collaboration let me create tools far beyond what I could have built alone, in a fraction of the time. AI didn't replace my creativity, it gave me the means to build my own 'paintbrushes'.
AI didn't make the art. AI gave me the means to make my own art, my own way, with my own tools.
Even a year ago, this was not possible. Today, anyone can use AI to build tools that unlock what they want to do, whether that's art, engineering, analysis, or something entirely new. The barriers between vision and execution are disappearing.
I am developing a talk on this journey, exploring how AI is reshaping the creative process, not replacing it. If your organisation, event, or community is exploring the intersection of AI, creativity, and data, I would love to have a chat.
But underneath the beauty, there is data that tells a stark story. This is climate change rendered as texture, colour, and form. Charts explain. Art provokes. Something beautiful enough to hang on a wall and unsettling enough to start a conversation about what 31,412 days of warming actually looks like.
Thirty pieces. Two collections. All designed in high resolution for large-format prints.
If your organisation cares about sustainability, climate, or environmental responsibility, I'd love to talk about what data-driven art could do in your space. I'm also exploring gallery exhibitions and I am open to commissioned work using custom datasets. Your data, your story, transformed into art.
What would your data look like as art? What story would it tell and what conversations would it start?
Full collections viewable here
For print enquiries, commissions, or exhibition conversations — DM me or reach out via the site.