@hieroglyphica22 Sorry for the slow response man. been a busy boy. just checked it. all is very much in order :) looks brilliant. such a pleasure to part of this piece. still gorgeous after all this time!
Digital art still has a serious “real world” problem. So, hats off to exhibitors like @KEF_Global that put in the effort to give serious digital works the full and proper showing they deserve. Really thrilled to be part of this exhibition with @mvrphyjames and @parametaio ✨💯
@hieroglyphica22 i did indeed, no joy. same result on safari also. maybe needs an explicit start button, or perhaps the gradual loading of the UI elements is becoming stuck, for some reason, just when it should be revealing the KEF X Parameta section.
Don’t ever propose to work with an artist that is doing work at the edge of vulnerability, if you are not willing to protect that.
If your game is money, work with artists that are only chasing money.
For some of us the cost to exist and manifest the work is too high.
▪️cemhah, Broken Mirrors.
- audiovisual generative project.
cemhah (@cemhah) works in the space where drawing becomes rhythm and particles a language. He studies movement at its smallest scale.
His looping works use pixels, rhythm, and repetition to show how complexity emerges from simple rules, a practice combines precision and intuition.
Originally trained in design and architecture, he uses structure the way a composer uses silence: to let emotion surface on its own, without instruction.
In Broken Mirrors, an audiovisual generative project created in collaboration with Murphy James (@mvrphyjames) they reveal a delicate exchange between drawing, sound, code and chance.
The artists explore how harmony can break and return, how structure depends on tension, and how a generative artwork can stay alive by remaining unpredictable and always in motion.
🌐 Release on Thursday Nov. 27th at @infiniteink_art.
▪️Murphy James, Broken Mirrors.
- audiovisual generative project.
Murphy James (@mvrphyjames) builds systems that refuse to stay still.
A composer and creative coder from Northern Ireland, now based in Berlin, he’s written music that behaves like a living argument; sound testing its own limits -shifting, breaking, reforming in endless variation.
His work lives between composition and observation: patterns guided just enough to let unpredictability speak. For James, music isn’t about repetition but renewal: the moment structure discovers its own instability.
In Broken Mirrors, created with cemhah (@cemhah), this philosophy becomes visible.
Audio and image respond to each other in real time: every note alteration supposes a change on the visuals, every flicker of light disrupts the harmony...
The result is a field of tension and repair: a living negotiation between noise and order.
Within SPARK, James reminds us that creation doesn’t mean control.
It means building a framework for the unexpected to arrive... and listening when it does.
🌐 Release on Thursday Nov. 27th at @infiniteink_art.
🌿 Soft Error. A Metamorphosis Chapter // Thank you, Berlin!
➤ @accomparts × @artontezos_ × @objktcom
From 6–9 November 2025, at Exhibition space of OOR Studio, Berlin - ACCOMPART’S, with the support of @cityxfoundation brought digital art into the physical world.
It was an unforgettable week of art, technology, and community — filled with inspiring conversations, collector breakfasts, and artist talks with @Rrose_Selavy_11 · @Rabbunnitt · @VonDoyl · @YNKAdigital · @aljaparis · @UnknownCo123
In the heart of Berlin, the Pink Room became a post-digital shrine — a space where fragility, memory, and transformation met through light, glitch, and emotion.
🖤 Huge thanks to everyone who joined us, shared their insights, and helped make this moment truly special.
Berlin became a living gallery last week as @artontezos_ took over the city 🇩🇪
From @laurenleemack's AUTO Berlin to @madebyoona's lens-only dress and after-hours exhibits, the events connected art, code, and performance in motion
Here are 5 takeaways from the week ↓
SPARK
▪️cemhah + Murphy James, Broken Mirrors.
· audiovisual generative project with IRL installation.
· release on Infinite Ink.
*More info TBA.
Broken Mirrors is a system that never truly stops, only shifts its form. A dialogue between repetition and fracture, a world that never stops moving, where each disturbance becomes the only moment of stillness we can see. Harmony is constantly rewritten, and every action fractures the composition only to rebuild it anew.
cemhah (@cemhah), known for his intricate systems of particles and digital reflections, builds a visual architecture from hand-drawn GIFs to fragments of motion mirrored into complex mosaics. Constellations of moving particles mirrored and tiled into quiet symmetry.
Murphy James (@mvrphyjames aka NotJamesMurphy), composer and creative coder, scores the system with a generative music composition, different on every iteration, and guided on an IRL setup by 8 MIDI parameters. These shared parameters influence both sound and image, binding them to the same logic.
The result is an audiovisual organism in which order and disruption coexist. Instrument notes introduce a brief interference: bursts of noise flood the mosaic, dissolving its particles before quietly reappearing again. The drawings remain constant, yet the rhythm of their disturbance never repeats. Every 3:33-minute iteration is unique.
The work questions what happens when movement never ends.
If everything keeps flowing, what does it take to notice the moment? To interrupt the repetition, even for an instant?
In SPARK, visitors will be able to use a custom-built controller to experience its endless iterations by tweaking its multiple parameters. You will be able to create and mint your own moment of fracture, a reminder that perception begins the moment the pattern breaks.
📹Video: randomized audiovisual outputs from Broken Mirrors.
🎵 Raw live music output from the system itself. No edit or mix has been made.
📍IRL installation at Art on Tezos, Berlin. (@artontezos_ )
🗓️ Nov. 6 to 9th // Schlachter 151.
A curation by The Lighthouse x Infinite Ink (@infiniteink_art)