Annick Wildeboer
As a creator, I love exploring the balance between playfulness and structure, often through movement, textures, or color. Whether I’m working with code, digital programs, or analog techniques, I approach every project with passion and dedication. Within the freedom of my creativity, I continuously seek the perfect balance to craft a unique and compelling story.
From code to embroidery
P5.js (Javascript) and embroidery machine
Inspired by the art of Vera Molnár, an animation was created using JavaScript. Stills from this animation were then transferred to a tea towel and a T-shirt using an embroidery machine.
Typographic animation 1
Javascript (p5.js)
An interactive memoir: Click to change the sentence, and move the mouse along the x-axis to change the colors!
Typographic animation 2
Javascript (p5.js)
The drawing dance
Arduino, hand puppet
Who is drawing? Human or machine?
Web-application
html, Javascript, css
A study on how A.I. perceives the way we hear the sounds on Earth.
Installation video
Bio-material, elektronics (waterpump and amplifier)
Many people seek peace, a sense of inner emptiness. You can find this emptiness when you become one with the flow of nature. Let yourself dissolve, surrender, and drift along with the self-created natural flow.
Bookdesign
Silkscreen cover.
Re-design of the book Postcolonial Echoes: Shadows of Colonialism in Contemporary Art by Tom Dose. Using only the flat text, the entire book was designed, printed, and bound.
Dictionary
Lead letters and letterpress ink
A dictionary that visually and textually explains proverbs containing the word 'blue'.
Poster 1
Lead letters, riso, A3
Poster 2
Printed on silver paper, A3
Poster 3
Silkscreen, A2
Poster inspired by the phrase 'We're all projected' from the movie The Cube. The phrase is interpreted and designed based on this interpretation.
Poster 4
White tone printer, A3
Class exhibition 2022
Receipt paper and a newspaper image.
The photo used is from an article about the earthquake in Turkey. The photo is repeated, with each repetition zooming in on two hands holding each other. The work is titled 'The Seizogram that Follows.'