Designing with Intention
How Architecture and Interface Influence My Art
One of the most fascinating overlaps in my creative life is the relationship between architecture, interface design, and digital art. Architecture teaches us how to guide people through physical space, while interface design focuses on guiding people through information. My work lives at the intersection of both—creating visual and interactive experiences that feel intentional, intuitive, and immersive.
My love for architecture comes from a place of awe. There’s something deeply moving about how structures can shape emotion, behavior, and memory. The clean lines of modernism, the ornate curves of Baroque facades, the raw honesty of Brutalism—all of these influence how I think about form, balance, and tension.
Similarly, my experience with interface design makes me constantly think about usability, clarity, and flow. In my digital art practice, I often ask: how should someone move through this piece? What emotions should they feel? Where does their attention go first?
This mindset leads me to approach my work like a spatial experience. Whether I’m building a generative piece or an interactive gallery, I want the viewer to feel guided but not controlled, immersed but not overwhelmed.
Designing with intention means bringing together the structural logic of architecture, the functional elegance of interface design, and the emotional resonance of art. It’s about shaping not just what people see, but how they feel and move through it.
For me, digital art isn’t just an image on a screen—it’s a space to step into, explore, and experience.