Toledo Museum of Art (Infinite Images: The Art of Algorithms)

The Challenge
The Toledo Museum of Art needed display technology that could disappear, letting generative and algorithmic art speak for itself. The exhibition required multiple display formats to showcase works ranging from immersive video to interactive installations, all with the clarity and presence that digital art demands.

When Technology Becomes Invisible, Art Speaks Louder
The Vision
Curated by Julia Kaganskiy, Infinite Images: The Art of Algorithms explores the intersection of art and technology, from early computer art experiments to today's algorithm-driven visuals. The vision was to present each work on displays that honored the artists' intent, making the technology invisible so the creativity could shine.
Code Becomes Canvas
The Experience
BSX provided multiple Vision X installations throughout the exhibition. Davide Quayola's Jardins d'Été transforms gardens into computational paintings through machine learning. Tyler Hobbs and Dandelion Mané's QQL invites visitors to generate unique visuals in real time via an interactive touch screen. Entangled Others by Feileacan McCormick and Sofia Crespo comes alive on a striking three-sided LED sculpture. Zach Lieberman's Color Blinds Study #4 dances on the Vision X Art Totem.
A New Era for Digital Art in Museums
The Impact
Infinite Images proves that generative art belongs in major museum exhibitions. The Vision X displays have given these algorithmic works the presence and fidelity they deserve, helping visitors experience digital creativity with the same reverence as paint on canvas. The exhibition redefines what museum-quality display can be.
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