"DOUBT" BY ALEXANDER DYOMKIN
Glitch art is a visual style utilizing digital or analog errors for aesthetic purposes. Glitch artists either distort digital data or physically manipulate electronic devices. The glitch visual aesthetic can be traced back in the XX century in the film A Colour Box, 1935 by Len Lye, the video sculpture TV Magnet, 1965 by Nam June Paik and forward to the more contemporary works such as Panasonic TH-42PWD8UK Plasma Screen Burn, 2007 by Cory Arcangel. Glitch effect is so widely used in digital art and design, that it has become a visual cliche.
Aleksander Dyomkin (Dyoma21), street artist and painter, applied the aesthetics of error in digital space to his first o...