Viewing Room | Mat Collishaw. Alluvion V, 2024

7 February - 10 March 2025
  • Mat Collishaw. Alluvion V, 2024, Jacquard Loom Tapestry, 166,5 x 140 cm Mat Collishaw. Alluvion V, 2024, Jacquard Loom Tapestry, 166,5 x 140 cm Mat Collishaw. Alluvion V, 2024, Jacquard Loom Tapestry, 166,5 x 140 cm

    Mat Collishaw. Alluvion V, 2024

    Jacquard Loom Tapestry, 166,5 x 140 cm
  • "Flowers have those beautiful shapes we love to look at, but the reason behind their beauty is attracting butterflies and other insects for the purpose of disseminating pollen. So, flowers manipulate others with their striking physical appearance. Their beauty therefore exists for solely egoistical reasons in fact, and I find this rather fascinating."

    – Mat Collishaw

    In his latest — Alluvion — series Mat Collishaw explores the intersection of nature’s evolutionary processes and artificial intelligence, examining how life’s instincts and behaviors can be manipulated. Building on his earlier explorations of the “evolutionary arms race” — the cycle of behaviors driving survival and reproduction — Collishaw focuses on AI’s potential to simulate and accelerate these patterns. His new tapestry works redefine floral forms, hybridizing species and evolving their digital DNA into increasingly complex and imaginative creations.
  • Mat Collishaw. Alluvion V, 2024 (detail) © Gary Tatintsian Gallery and the artist
  • While technology is central to Alluvion, the series also pays homage to centuries-old craftsmanship. Collishaw harnesses artificial intelligence to generate intricate botanical forms inspired by the Old Masters, then materializes these digital visions through traditional weaving techniques. He employs the jacquard loom—a method refined in the 19th century but rooted in medieval textile traditions—to translate his AI-generated imagery. Notably, the jacquard loom was the first to use punchcard software, producing the earliest ‘digital images’ over 200 years ago. This pioneering system later influenced the development of modern computing, making Collishaw’s choice of medium particularly resonant: his works bridge the origins of digital technology with its latest evolution in AI.

     

    Despite its technological foundations, Alluvion also nods to art historical giants such as Hieronymus Bosch, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Salvador Dalí. Collishaw fuses de Heem’s meticulous still lifes, O’Keeffe’s bold abstractions, and Dalí’s surreal dreamscapes to create hybridized, AI-generated flora. The result is a surrealism so seamlessly entwined with reality that the boundary between them dissolves.

  • Collishaw’s tapestry series draws from the tradition of medieval woven artworks, where depictions of flora carried deep symbolic and spiritual meaning. Flowers, leaves, and vines were not merely decorative but served as allegories of life, renewal, transience, and the passage of time. Meticulously woven, these botanical motifs functioned both as studies of nature and as reflections on humanity’s relationship with the natural world. Collishaw extends this legacy, infusing his approach to color, form, and narrative with the essence of this historical tradition.
  • With Alluvion, Collishaw reinvents a centuries-old art form for the digital age, masterfully crafting an immersive and thought-provoking body of work that challenges perceptions of authenticity, craftsmanship, and technology’s evolving role in art. By blending AI with the historic jacquard weaving process, he not only reimagines floral and illusionary forms but also questions the very nature of digital creation and its relationship to human artistry.
  • 'Nature and art history are two themes that have been present in my work for over 20 years. I've drawn...
    Mat Collishaw © Courtesy Mat Collishaw / VMI Studio

    "Nature and art history are two themes that have been present in my work for over 20 years. I've drawn from them to explore how we create images of the world around us and the way those images influence or change the way we see the world."

     

    – Mat Collishaw



  • "

    The mathematical logic of breeding pictures is indistinguishable from the mathematical logic of breeding pigeons. Conceptually the two processes are equivalent. Although we may call it artificial evolution, there is nothing about it that is more or less artificial than breeding dachshunds. Both methods are equally artificial (of the art) and natural (true to nature).
     
    In the simulated universe evolution has been yanked from the living world and left naked in mathematics. Stripped of its cloak of tissue and hair, stolen from its womb of moist wet flesh, and then spirited into circuits, the vital essence of evolution has moved from the world of the born to the world of the made, from its former sole domain of carbon ring to the manufactured silicon world of algorithmic chips.
     
    The shock is not that evolution has been transported from carbon to silicon; silicon and carbon are actually very similar elements. The shock of artificial evolution is that it is fundamentally natural to computers.
     
    – Kein Kelly
    Writer and the founding executive editor of Wired
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