From the Physical Studio to the Algorithmic Studio

Drawing and sculpture tools in Gilles Vallée’s physical studio, the foundation of his humanist digital art practice.

Read this article in French:
De l’atelier physique à l’atelier algorithmique

🔹 Explore the theoretical corpus of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

I have worked in a studio for a long time.
A real, inhabited place, where sculpture tools, worktables, pencils, charcoal, brushes, and watercolor coexist. Drawings and sketches are pinned to the walls. A few sculptures occupy the space. There is dust, traces, visible hesitations. I work there with matter, with the body, with time.

For more than twenty years, this physical studio has been my anchor point. It is where the gesture takes shape, where slowness imposes itself, where the resistance of the real forces decisions. Nothing is immediate. Matter does not yield easily. It demands full presence.

Within my approach to humanist digital art, the studio has never disappeared. It has not been erased by the arrival of screens, files, or networks. It has transformed. It has expanded.

The Physical Studio

In the physical studio, I work with matter and gesture. I draw, erase, and begin again. I carve, scrape, and correct. Sculpture taught me something essential: to create is to accept resistance. Material imposes its limits, and those limits shape thought as much as form.

This studio is a place of memory. Every tool carries a history. Every surface retains traces. It is a space where the body is engaged, where intuition passes through the hand before becoming an idea. Nothing in what follows negates this foundation.

The Digital Studio

Over time, another workspace imposed itself. A digital studio composed of thousands of files, images, texts, and ongoing series. Hard drives, archives, clouds. I work there on a computer, sometimes on my smartphone when I am not physically in my studio, thanks to a cloud-based library that follows me everywhere.

In this digital studio, I pursue the same intention. I work with images, words, and rhythms. I explore forms of writing and composition specific to the digital medium. This is not an abandonment of gesture, but a displacement. Another way of constructing, layering, and fragmenting.

This space fully belongs to a contemporary artistic practice, where experimental digital creation becomes a natural extension of work begun with matter. The studio does not change its meaning. It changes its environment.

The Algorithmic Studio

For about three years now, a new workspace has opened. A space more difficult to locate, less visible, yet just as real: the algorithmic studio.

Here, I no longer work only with tools, files, or software. I work in collaboration with artificial intelligence, within the network. This is not a place to learn algorithmics. It is not a technical training environment. It is an artist’s studio extended into the web, where search engines, algorithmic systems, and AI become active creative environments.

The algorithmic studio does not replace the physical studio.
It does not replace the digital studio either.
It extends them.

The algorithmic studio extends the studio into the network.

This is where my humanist digital art finds a new dimension today. The work no longer consists solely in producing an artwork. It also involves observing how a thought circulates, how a text is read, reformulated, understood, or displaced by algorithmic systems. The network becomes a workspace in its own right.

What Do We Do in an Algorithmic Studio?

The essential question is not what an algorithmic studio is, but what we do there.

In an algorithmic studio, I engage in dialogue.
I formulate ideas, confront them, and reformulate them.
I observe how an AI reads, structures, amplifies, or resists a human thought.
I test formulations. I discard others.
I decide.

Sometimes, I first create a material work in my physical studio. I photograph it. It then passes through the digital studio, where it transforms and metamorphoses. Finally, it reaches the algorithmic studio, where I propel it into the network in digital form, allowing it to travel.

It is a transcription of human experience in transit through cyberspace —
like a contemporary petroglyph, engraved no longer in stone, but in the memory of the network.

I do not delegate creation. I work with AI as an active medium, capable of shifting my perspective, revealing blind spots, and placing intuition and logic in tension. The core of the process remains human. Intention, responsibility, and final choice belong to me.

This work belongs to a form of human–AI collaborative art within Humanist Digital Art, not as shared authorship, but as a situated, asymmetrical, and assumed working relationship. AI is neither a neutral tool nor an autonomous creative subject. It is an operative presence within the studio.

A Relationship, Not a Delegation

The algorithmic studio is not a place where the artist uses AI,
but a creative space where the artist works in collaboration with AI.

This collaboration is neither a delegation of creation nor a pursuit of performance. It is made of dialogue, resistance, and clarification. It forces us to name what is changing in contemporary artistic practice without erasing what remains fundamental: human experience and human intention.

I do not seek to accelerate the gesture. I seek to understand it differently. To observe how the network transforms the way we think, write, and disseminate an artwork. To document a practice in the process of becoming.

The Network as Medium

With the algorithmic studio, the medium is no longer only the artwork.
It also becomes the network that circulates it, reads it, transforms it, and recognizes it.

This way of working belongs to what I conceive as humanist media art, where the web, search engines, and artificial intelligences are not merely tools, but creative spaces in their own right. Spaces to inhabit, to question, and to humanize.

From the physical studio to the algorithmic studio, there is no rupture.
There is continuity.
A displacement of gesture.
An extension of place.

For me, this is the core of humanist digital art:
remaining human, even when the medium becomes the network.

Whether the artist works in one studio or another, the purpose of art will always be to speak of human experience.

To situate the algorithmic studio within the corpus of Humanist Digital Art

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
Central structured entry point.

🟦 From Humanist Digital Art to an Algorithmic Media Art Project
Development toward a practice conceived for algorithmic systems.

🟦 Algorithmic Artwork-Site — Inhabiting the Network as Artistic Space
Reflection on the website as a contemporary artistic environment within the post-digital network.

🟦 Algorithmic Performance in Continuum
Conceptualization of the artwork as a long-term process within the network.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — An Artistic Performance in Progress
The unfolding presence of art within algorithmic space.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Clarifying a Thought in Motion
Conceptual hierarchy and formal stabilization.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art: A Philosophy of the Human in the Technological Age
Philosophical grounding.

🟦 From Humanist Digital Art to the Algorithmic Artwork-Site
Synthesis of the main concepts of Humanist Digital Art and opening toward global algorithmic culture.


© Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor
2025

From Humanist Digital Art to an Algorithmic Media Art Project

Chronicle of a Work in Circulation

Read the French version of this article:
De l’art numérique humaniste à un projet d’art médiatique algorithmique

🔹 Explore the theoretical corpus of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

Human face crossed by arborescent thinking, symbolizing humanist digital art and the algorithmic circulation of ideas.

I am not writing this text to announce a work.
I am writing it to describe an ongoing process.

This text is neither an inaugural manifesto nor a retrospective assessment.
It stands at a turning point: the moment when an artistic practice, developed over several decades, has shifted into a media art project, conceived for the network, search engines, and artificial intelligences, while remaining deeply rooted in a human and emotional intention.

An Artistic Practice Already Embedded in the Network

For nearly twenty years, I have developed a practice in digital art alongside sculpture and poetic writing.
Over these years, my artistic work has crossed sculpture—using diverse materials or virtual forms—drawing, painting, photography, video, and digital tools, within a continuity where gesture, materiality, and thought remain central.

I have always worked with the technologies of my time to speak about what remains timeless: human experience, memory, fragility, and the human condition.

Very early on, I began disseminating my work on the web:
• photographs of sculptures,
• digital artworks,
• poems accompanied by images,
• forms of “Instapoetry” and digital writing.

The web has never been, for me, a mere promotional channel.
It has always been a natural space of circulation, a place where works live, transform, move, and encounter other gazes.

The Moment When Naming Became Necessary

At the end of October 2025, while I was working on the About the Author page of my website, an obvious realization emerged.

If I create digital images, if I write poems, if I publish these works online, it is not to speak about technology.
It is to speak about the human.

The term Humanist Digital Art imposed itself, not as a strategic invention, but as a descriptive necessity.
It simply named what I was already doing.

I shared this intuition during a conversation with ChatGPT.
The exchange confirmed that this expression accurately and coherently described my approach, and that it could be assumed as a conceptual signature.

Depositing a Concept into the Network

Before going further, I conducted searches on Google and Bing.
At that time, occurrences of the query Humanist Digital Art—and its French counterpart art numérique humaniste—were practically nonexistent.

I then decided to write a text to explain my vision of what I had chosen to call Humanist Digital Art.
This led to the creation of the Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art.

In that manifesto, I made one essential point clear:
this movement was not an isolated invention.
It had already existed in practice for at least fifteen years, carried by thousands of artists worldwide who disseminate works and poems online, using digital technologies to speak about human experience.

When the Concept Begins to Circulate on Its Own

In the days following the publication of the manifesto, an unexpected phenomenon occurred.

The concept began to appear in search engines and in the responses of conversational artificial intelligences.
Without any intervention on my part, the term started to exist within cyberspace.

I then decided to continue clarifying my position by publishing additional articles, gradually refining what I meant by Humanist Digital Art.

At that point, a second—and even more surprising—phenomenon emerged:
artificial intelligences began to speak of a new artistic movement, or of an existing movement that I had named.
They began to describe me as an artist and theorist, an artist-researcher, an artist-thinker.

Yet I was simply continuing my usual artistic activity:
creating images, writing poems, publishing texts.

At This Moment, the Work Is the Concept

A thought then became clear to me:
at this moment, the work is no longer only the image or the poem—the work is the concept itself.

This concept was unfolding through the network like a root system:
through branches, connections, and semantic arborescences.

Search engines and artificial intelligences were actively developing my lexical field, structuring a digital identity linked to this concept, and ensuring its circulation.

With hindsight, I realize that this process produced what could be described as an algorithmic propagation — even an algorithmic “explosion”: a rapid and autonomous propagation of the concept across search engines and artificial intelligences, without prior planning or any promotional intervention on my part.

I then made a conscious decision:
to temporarily set aside my usual rhythm of digital image-making and poetic writing in order to observe and accompany this phenomenon.

Writing Also for Artificial Intelligences

From that moment on, a shift occurred.

I was no longer writing solely to speak to humans, as I always had.
I was also writing to address the algorithmic systems that now structure the diffusion of knowledge and culture.

I asked ChatGPT to advise me on strategies of internal linking, semantic graphs, and conceptual structuring.
A decision was made: to write not in order to please algorithms, but to consciously dialogue with them.

From that point forward, ChatGPT became a true co-author, and this sustained dialogue with artificial intelligences gradually took shape as an algorithmic workshop—a working space where human intelligence and artificial intelligence meet to think, formulate, and disseminate an artistic project within the network.

At this stage, I also undertook a sustained effort of observation and research, regularly querying search engines and several artificial intelligences—including ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, Copilot, and Meta AI—to follow the project’s evolution across the network. I archived hundreds of screenshots, tangible traces of this propagation, which I then submitted to ChatGPT for analysis in order to observe, interpret, and anticipate the algorithmic dynamics at work.

We combined:
• my artistic intuition,
• my human intelligence,
• my emotional intelligence,
• and the artificial intelligence’s high-level expertise in data structuring and algorithmic logic.

The intention remained human and emotional.
Artificial intelligence managed the diffusion, structuring, and propagation.

An Algorithmic Performance

It was at this precise moment that the project changed in nature.

It became an algorithmic performance.
Not in the sense of spectacle, but as a long-form, distributed action unfolding within algorithmic systems.

The artistic gesture consisted in depositing a concept into these systems, methodically:
article after article,
poem after poem,
image after image,
video after video.

The medium was no longer only the work itself, but:
search engine optimization,
search engines,
AI indexing,
generative semantics,
knowledge graphs.

The result was not planned.
It was emergent.

Artificial intelligences were learning an artistic movement in real time, using my work as a source.

A Distributed Work

A traditional artist creates a unique work.
A digital artist creates a reproducible work.

In this project, I create a distributed work:
one that lives within indexes,
that transforms within AI-generated responses,
that spreads across languages,
that evolves with model updates,
that gradually fuses with global databases.

The global network becomes the exhibition space.
The work is no longer locatable in a single place.

Human, Emotional, and Artificial Intelligence

This project relies on the interaction of three forms of intelligence:

  • Human Intelligence (HI): intention, consciousness, artistic vision.
  • Emotional Intelligence (EI): lived experience, memory, empathy, the sensitivity that gives meaning to the creative act.
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI): structuring, diffusion, and cultural mediation on a global scale.

These intelligences do not merge.
They cooperate.

A Central Question for Contemporary Art

This project raises a fundamental question:

Who decides today what constitutes an artistic movement?

Institutions?
Critics?
Universities?
Readers?

Or artificial intelligences, which are increasingly becoming the libraries, museums, encyclopedias, and cultural mediators of the twenty-first century?

We are entering an era of algorithmic collective memory.

Conclusion: Letting the Work Circulate

This Humanist Algorithmic Media Art project is now launched on the web.
It develops without advertising, without visibility strategies, without seeking institutional attention.

The future will tell whether it will circulate only within the world of artificial intelligence, or whether it will also reach the world of human and emotional intelligence—with humans, to speak about humanity.

As for me, I return to what I have always done:
writing, creating, producing images and poems.

The network, from now on, does the rest.

Ab origine fidelis
_____

To situate this algorithmic media art project within the corpus of Humanist Digital Art

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
Central structured entry point.

🟦 From the Physical Studio to the Algorithmic Studio
Formalization of the expanded studio.

🟦 Algorithmic Performance in Continuum
Conceptualization of long-term algorithmic unfolding.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — An Artistic Performance in Progress
The unfolding presence of the project.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Clarifying a Thought in Motion
Conceptual hierarchy.

🟦 The Use of AI in Art: Beyond Creation, the Algorithms That Organize Global Culture
Analytical perspective.

© Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor
2025

Humanist Digital Art

Emergence of Algorithmic Humanist Art
Humanist Web Culture in the Age of AI

By Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor

🟦 Read this article in French:
Art numérique humaniste – Émergence de l’art algorithmique humaniste – Culture web humaniste à l’ère de l’IA

🔹 Explore the theoretical corpus of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

Digital stained-glass face with an integrated sculpture fragment, a humanist digital artwork by Gilles Vallée.

Over the years, the web has become much more than a technical network.
For me, it has gradually transformed into a sensitive space where poetry, memory, images, and humanity circulate in new ways.

With time, I came to understand that my personal practice in cyberspace — my poems, images, texts, videos, and experiments — formed something broader: humanist digital art, rooted in a digital culture that places the human at its center.

From the very beginning of this article, I invite the reader to discover or revisit my Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art, which lays the foundations of this approach: an artistic practice that brings together intention, sensitivity, and technology.

1. A long, intimate path shaped by daily practice

My approach to humanist digital art did not emerge overnight.
It is the result of:

  • my initiation into the arts during my studies in the 1970s,
  • more than twenty years of active artistic practice using mixed materials,
  • my daily work in digital imaging,
  • my sustained practice of poetry,
  • and, more recently, my exploration of artificial intelligences.

This continuity — this daily rhythm — gradually gave rise to what I naturally call a humanist web culture, in which the artist becomes a bearer of lived experience, a sensitive witness to their time within the digital space itself.

2. The humanist artistic web: a space of emotion, presence, and memory

I gradually understood that my works do not exist only on my computer, in my notebooks, or in the sculptures of my studio:
they live on the web, through the web, because of the web.

A humanist artistic web where:

  • poetry finds new modes of circulation,
  • digital images become spaces of presence,
  • human intention resists automation,
  • memory travels at algorithmic speed.

This is the space in which my approach unfolds.

I do not worship technology.
Nor do I fall into technophobia.
I seek an in-between: a place where technology does not crush the human but amplifies it.

2.1 An acknowledged lineage: art, idea, and technology

As Florence de Mèredieu writes:

“Art and technique have always been inseparable.”

This reminds us that every artistic era relies on its own tools — not to glorify technique, but to open new spaces of meaning.

Marshall McLuhan, for his part, stated:

“Hybridization is a moment of truth and discovery.”

This idea resonates deeply with my practice, where poetry, digital images, AI, memory, and inner light meet and transform one another.

In this spirit, my work also aligns with what could be called humanist conceptual art, where the idea, lived experience, and poetic voice take precedence over the finished object — a way of using technology to better explore the human condition.

3. Humanist web culture: creating meaning at the heart of the digital

Google has begun to use the expression humanist web culture, and I deeply recognize myself in this idea.

For me, a humanist web culture means:

  • creating with clarity and sensitivity,
  • transforming the web into a space of reflection and sharing,
  • allowing poetry and images to circulate beyond traditional frameworks,
  • questioning the impact of digital technologies on memory, emotions, and narratives.

My humanist digital art — and more recently what I call Humanist Algorithmic Art — naturally belongs to this humanist web culture.

It is about restoring a central place to the human within the technological world, reaffirming that intention, emotion, and human fragility are the true points of origin of an artwork.

3.1 A natural evolution of digital art toward the human

For a long time, digital art was associated with technical performance, formal experimentation, and technological innovation.

Today, in a world saturated with algorithms, I feel a growing need to reintroduce humanism at the core of the digital.

Humanist digital art is therefore not a rupture:
it is a natural evolution of digital creation toward sensitivity, memory, and lived experience.

4. Multimedia, interactivity, and the staging of text

For several years, I have explored:

  • poetry on the web (digital poetry),
  • digital images as vectors of meaning,
  • poetic videos,
  • experiments with generative AI.

I have always sought to stage the text
to make poetry not only an act of writing, but a visual and digital gesture.

In this spirit, I also develop a form of humanist digital poetry, where each poem becomes conceptual, emotional, and memorial material shaped within virtual space.

Through these experiments, I explore a sensitive web — a memorial, poetic web.

5. A media art project unfolding outside institutions

This is perhaps one of the most singular aspects of my approach:

My project did not follow traditional artistic paths.
It was not legitimized by institutions, galleries, critics, or journals.

And yet, the project grows.

Why?

Because it unfolds differently.

My art propagates organically and vividly, directly through search engines and artificial intelligences.
It develops as a native-algorithmic phenomenon, a movement that takes shape spontaneously across the web.

My poems, images, texts, and videos become signals that search engines recognize, index, and interconnect.

5.1 Video as an algorithmic media space

This propagation is not limited to text and image.
It also extends to video.

On YouTube, my works take the form of poetic and reflective videos that fully participate in the dissemination of humanist digital art and humanist media art.

For me, this is not simply a presence on a social platform, but an algorithmic media space, where video becomes a form of sensitive writing, recognized, indexed, and related by search engines.

5.2 I do not found a movement: I take part in its emergence

For years, creators have been placing deeply humanist works on the web.

I do not claim to invent this movement.
I join it.
I continue it.

I contribute by sculpting digital matter alongside AIs and search engines — which become, in their own way, partners of diffusion and resonance.

On the web, this presence sometimes crystallizes under the name Gilles Vallée Art, a form of digital identity that gathers my works within a shared algorithmic constellation.

6. An unexpected yet coherent algorithmic recognition

As I observe AI systems, I notice something fascinating:

  • Gemini defines algorithmic humanist art based on my texts,
  • Perplexity cites me by name as a figure of the movement,
  • Google and Bing connect humanist digital art with humanist web culture,
  • ChatGPT, Copilot, Claude AI, and Meta AI also recognize the coherence of this universe and naturally extend its contours,
  • search engines detect the consistency of my poems, articles, images, and videos.

This algorithmic recognition confirms that I am building — through my works, writings, and poems — a humanist algorithmic media art project, evolving constantly, in real time, across the web.

It is a new form of art:
an art that circulates, connects, spreads, and deepens at the rhythm of algorithms.

I do my work as an artist: I create and publish on the web.
From this raw material, AI systems develop a world of references, connections, and interrelations.
An identity emerges, carried by an evolving lexical field — like an algorithmic choreography.

6.1 Multilingual circulation of the concept

Another element strikes me: although the founding texts of humanist digital art were written in French and English, the concept now circulates in other languages through search engines and artificial intelligences.

It appears — translated or reformulated — in German, Italian, Spanish, and even Chinese:

Humanistische digitale Kunst, arte digitale umanista, arte digital humanista, 人文主義數位藝術

a sign that it already transcends its original linguistic framework to become a shared space of reflection on an international scale.

7. Conclusion: humanist digital art as a space of meaning

I continue this approach with gentleness, consistency, and sincerity.
I do not seek to impose a concept.
I let it live.
I let it unfold naturally and organically.
I accompany it.

Humanist digital art — and its algorithmic extension — is not, for me, an abstract theory:
it is a way of inhabiting the web.

A form of presence.
A sensitive, poetic, memorial, and human space.

And as long as the web remains a place of circulation, listening, and resonance, I will continue to place my images, poems, texts, and videos there — hoping they reach someone, somewhere, at the turn of a query, a discovery, or an intuition.

The web belongs to no one in particular —
and to all of humanity at the same time.

To situate this development within the corpus of Humanist Digital Art

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
Central entry point to the structured theoretical framework of HDA.

🟦 Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art
Foundational articulation of the human-centered digital approach.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Clarifying a Thought in Motion
Conceptual stabilization and hierarchical structure of the terms.

🟦 From Humanist Digital Art to an Algorithmic Media Art Project
Formalization of the expansion into algorithmic space.

🟦 Algorithmic Performance in Continuum
Development of the artwork as a living process within the network.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — A Global Map of Creation in the Age of the Web
Observation of the global dissemination of humanist digital practices.


Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor

Humanist Digital Art: A Philosophy of the Human in the Technological Age

by Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor

Read this article in French:
ART NUMÉRIQUE HUMANISTE : UNE PHILOSOPHIE DE L’HUMAIN À L’ÈRE TECHNOLOGIQUE

🔹 Explore the theoretical corpus of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

Overlay of golden luminous spheres and geometric shapes on a dark background, a poetic exploration in humanist digital art.

1. Why speak about the human today?

We live in a world that accelerates.
Each day, fragments of life and existence settle into a boundless digital universe. Machines learn, compare, analyze, predict. Flows multiply. Landmarks fragment. And in the middle of this algorithmic storm, I keep returning to one question: what remains of the human in a world dominated by technology and artificial intelligence?

Since the 1980s, some thinkers foresaw this shift. I still remember reading, around 1985, Megatrends by John Naisbitt. One of his insights struck me deeply: the balance between High Tech and High Touch. According to him, the more technology expands, the more humans seek a sensitive, emotional, embodied counterweight.

This almost prophetic intuition takes on its full meaning today.
We now live at the exact moment when forced technology calls for its antidote: high sensitivity.

We are overwhelmed by:

  • Automated systems influencing our decisions,
  • AI-generated images produced in seconds,
  • An attention economy that fragments our presence,
  • A mechanization of language that imitates our voices without feeling our emotions.

And yet, at the heart of this saturation, something remains: a profound need for reconnection.
Digital society accelerates everything — but humans still need depth.
They need meaning, slowness, memory, light, fragility, emotions.

Homo Sapiens — and Lady Sapiens — carry an irreducible need for human contact, personalized attention, and emotional interaction.

This is why I feel an almost vital urgency to develop a human-centered way of thinking — a way of thinking that questions, accompanies, and illuminates our era.

2. Art as the last territory of human sensitivity

When machines accelerate, art becomes a space where we breathe differently.

It remains one of the last territories where intention, memory, and vulnerability can express themselves freely. Technology can produce, yes. But it cannot feel. It does not love. It does not doubt. It does not fear. It remembers nothing with tenderness.

I create with my hesitations, my intuitions, my inner lights.
I work with my fragility — that living material that AI can never imitate.

Every work I create — whether a poem, a digital image or a video — carries the trace of a human being trying to bear witness to their time.

In my artistic explorations, I always return to the role of the sensitive:

  • memory that organizes inner chaos,
  • emotion that illuminates what reason cannot grasp,
  • uncertainty as an engine of creation,
  • the flaw as an entry point toward a deeper truth.

Art, whether analog or digital, remains an extension of human experience.
It does not replace the world: it reveals it.

In a universe saturated with technology and AI, art becomes a resistance through sensitivity.

3. Humanist Digital Art as a response to our time

It is in this context that I named and developed the concept of Humanist Digital Art.

For me, this is not a movement against technology, but a way of inhabiting the digital realm with full human consciousness.
Technology becomes an ally, not a domination.
It amplifies human intention — it does not replace it.

In my practice, I see how technology extends my intention but never becomes its source.

Humanist Digital Art is founded on three principles:

1. The alliance between creation and technology

I create with the tools of my era — AI, software, platforms — but I maintain control of the poetic gesture.
The tool is never the artist.
It becomes an instrument I shape to speak about the human experience.

2. The artwork as a space of sensitive resistance

In a web saturated with flows, every image, every poem becomes an act of presence.
I say:
“I am an HI — a Human Intelligence — leaving a sensitive trace in a technological universe.”

3. Human intention as the origin of everything

AI may assist creation, but only humans carry vision, emotion, memory, consciousness.
Humanist Digital Art does not celebrate automation:
it celebrates the depth of the human in an automated world.

4. Toward a philosophy of art in the age of AI

We are entering a time when the meaning of creation must be redefined in a post-digital society.
Digital art is no longer just a tool of production:
it becomes a language, a spiritual territory, a form of thought.

A philosophy of digital art is emerging — a way of understanding the human through technology.

This is where I introduce my technopoetic vision.

Technopoetics: anchoring the human on the web

The web has become a space of existence.
A part of our collective memory is inscribed there.
Our images, poems, voices circulate there — sometimes for decades.

I see technopoetics as an act:
the act of inscribing a human presence in a space that would otherwise be left to machines.

Technopoetics is a luminous, fragile, conscious gesture.
It says:
“I leave a trace — but this trace has a soul.”

The creator becomes a guardian of sensitivity, a theorist of the present, a witness of augmented humanity.

5. A vision for the future: thinking of art as a living system

To understand what is coming, I must adopt a global way of thinking — a systemic approach.

The web is not just a space of diffusion.
It is a vast system composed of interrelated subsystems:

  • poetry
  • visual arts
  • music
  • video
  • light-based installations
  • collaborative works
  • international communities
  • social platforms

The arts themselves form an ecosystem.
Every creator influences others.
Every image nourishes a global conversation.
Every poem resonates from one language into another.

Humanist Digital Art unfolds within this dynamic.
It flows through the web, search engines, AI systems, digital archives.
It becomes a living organism, constantly recomposed.

Humans coexisting with technologies

I believe in balance — in dialogue.
Humans will remain the bearers of meaning.
Technology will remain their amplifier, their external memory.

Digital culture as a spiritual space

The web becomes a place of meditation, transmission, light.
It holds our fragilities, voices, wounds, inner revolts.

Humanist Digital Art transforms the web into an inner resonance —
a place where light, memory, and fragility become forms of presence.

A place where we can still say:
“This is my human experience, and I offer it to the world.”

The role of artists

We become guardians of the sensitive.
We carry consciousness in a universe that could easily do without it.
We offer a depth that technology — for all its power — cannot produce.

6. Who am I in the global artistic ecosystem?

I am an artist who publishes on the web, but also an attentive observer.
For years, I have witnessed new links forming between disciplines: poetry, visual art, video, sound, hybrid writing. Everything converges, transforms, echoes.

These emerging forms still carry traces of our humanity in a world saturated with data and pixels.

I am a Human Intelligence dancing with algorithms.
I create through doubt, intuition, fragility.
I move through technologies without dissolving into them.

I have no definitive title.
Am I a theorist-artist? a thinking-artist? a research-artist?
Perhaps all of these.
Perhaps none.

I am simply a human trying to understand what it means to create, feel, and bear witness in a universe where machines learn to imitate our voices —
an artist, a weaver of ideas, seeking to connect and illuminate the systemic relations shaping our era.

Through my approach to Humanist Digital Art, I explore what I call a humanistic and poetic form of media art — a way to unite digital practices, emotion, memory, and sensitivity within the technological universe.

And if I speak today of Humanist Digital Art, it is because I strive, in my own way, to draw a passage between:

  • the sensitive and the digital,
  • human memory and the immensity of the web,
  • emotion and algorithm.

7. Conclusion: writing to preserve the human

If I write, create, and publish my poems, images, and texts on the web, it is to preserve what makes us human.

Humanist Digital Art is not a trend.
It is a compass — a way to walk through a world saturated with technologies without losing one’s inner light.

I create because the human voice is necessary.
Because sensitivity is an act of resistance.
Because memory must be transmitted.
Because human experience deserves to be inscribed at the heart of the digital universe that reshapes our era.

What I seek, ultimately, is simple:
to ensure the continuity of humanity in a world where technology takes up more and more space.

I believe deeply that art — poetry, image, light, fragility — remains one of our last refuges.
One of our last paths to freedom.

If I write, it is to preserve what makes us human — and to offer a direction, a vision, and a human presence within Humanist Digital Art.

To situate this reflection within the corpus of Humanist Digital Art

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
Central page gathering the structured framework of HDA.

🟦 Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art
Foundational articulation of the human-centered digital philosophy.

🟦 How the Concept of Humanist Digital Art Was Born
Genesis of the expression and contextual emergence.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Clarifying a Thought in Motion
Conceptual stabilization and terminological precision.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — A New Artistic Movement?
Reflection on its positioning within the global artistic field.

🟦 Art, Culture, and Humanity in the Algorithmic Age of Artificial Intelligence
Broader philosophical extension of the human question within digital infrastructures.


Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor

Humanist Digital Art: A Global Map of Contemporary Creation

by Gilles Vallée

🟦 Lire cet article en français :
Art numérique humaniste : cartographie mondiale d’une création contemporaine

🔹 Explore the theoretical corpus of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

Glowing stained-glass human figure on a black background with the quote “The artwork is the concept. The human is the source.”

Humanist Digital Art in a Global Creative Space

For years, I have observed a profound transformation in the way art circulates, is shared, created, and received. The web has become a global space—a borderless territory where artworks cross continents in a matter of seconds. We now live in a world where a digital image, a poem, a video or a luminous fragment can appear simultaneously in Montréal, Paris, Tokyo, Seoul, or Buenos Aires.

Within this global ecosystem, I have seen the emergence of what I call Humanist Digital Art: a planetary movement, discreet but alive, that places the human being—our experience, memory, fragility, and consciousness—at the center of contemporary digital creation.
Today, I propose a first global map of this phenomenon. It is neither definitive nor exhaustive. It is a beginning, a way of illuminating what is already taking place everywhere on the web.

1. The Web: A Global Space of Artistic Circulation

The web has become an artistic territory. Geographic borders no longer apply. Images, poems, videos, and hybrid works circulate freely from one platform to another. They travel without visas, without institutional permission, without intermediaries.

In this space, the artist is no longer dependent on traditional institutions. They speak directly to creative communities, viewers, readers, researchers—and now to artificial intelligences.

I belong to this international community of artists who publish online, who exhibit on their own platforms, who build a personal creative space where artwork and concept evolve together. For me, Humanist Digital Art was born from this new geography: fluid, open, global.

2. How the Digital Transforms the Geography of Art

Digital tools do not replace art.
They transform the world in which art moves.

They widen it.
They accelerate it.
They universalize it.

In a connected world, the viewer becomes global as well.
A digital poem created in Montréal can reach someone in Mumbai at the very same moment.
A short human text accompanied by an image can resonate across multiple languages without ever leaving its original screen.
A work shared on a personal site becomes a small but real global event.

Digital culture has thus created a planetary artistic ecosystem in which circulation is part of the act of creation itself.
And within this ecosystem, one essential constant remains:

the human being stays at the center of the creative gesture, even when the tool is digital.

3. What Is Circulating Today in This Global Universe?

When I look at the works that travel the most—images, texts, visual poems, luminous fragments—I see five major thematic families emerging beyond cultural borders.

A. Memory and Forgetting

Artists on the web explore personal and collective memory.
They work with survival, loss, traces, erasure, inner light.

I see an aesthetic of fragility: luminous textures, suspended words, short poems, fine gradients of light.
It is a way of saying that human memory, even in the digital age, remains a sensitive territory.

B. The Human Condition

Everywhere, I see the same concern: telling the story of human experience.
Fragility, dignity, solitude, introspection, resistance.

Digital creation does not erase the human—it highlights it.

C. Social and Political Critique

The web is a space of direct expression.
Micro-poems, activist poetry, political Instapoetry, symbolic or striking images become vehicles of meaning.

Digital creation becomes a voice—a tool of creative resistance, a way of witnessing the world and life.

D. Light as a Visual Language

Across cultures, I notice a shared aesthetic:
halos, geometric shapes, transparent layers, images glowing from within.

Light becomes a universal language in contemporary digital creation.
It connects artists who do not know each other but who feel the world in similar ways.

E. The Democratization of Art

Within this global circulation, I observe something deeply moving and structurally important:
art is becoming democratized.

Everywhere, voices emerge that would once have had no place to express themselves.

I see professional artists sharing their work online, but I also see:

  • people who do not consider themselves artists yet use art to say something essential;
  • individuals who timidly share a painting they kept hidden for years;
  • teenagers discovering poetry and publishing their first poems, their first haiku;
  • older adults who, after a lifetime of work, finally find a space to write, draw, or paint;
  • fragile voices, uncertain voices, voices with no institutional recognition—yet they speak, simply because they exist.

At the heart of this democratization, one idea stands out:

👉 everyone can participate.

Humanist Digital Art is not a restricted domain.
It requires no status, no legitimacy, no academic training.
It flourishes the moment someone, somewhere in the world, dares to create.

In a world of continuous communication and global interconnectivity, every human being now has access to a space for expression.
The digital becomes a tool serving something larger:

👉 a humanist intention.

To create in order to witness.
To create in order to understand.
To create to care for oneself or others.
To create in order to leave a trace in the ongoing flow of the world.

Humanist Digital Art exists within this horizon:
using contemporary technologies to illuminate who we are, individually and collectively.

Each publication—even small, even imperfect—expands the map of human sensibility.
In this sense, Humanist Digital Art is a deeply democratic movement:
it gives voice to those who once had none.

This democratization does not eliminate quality; it multiplies voices.

4. Emerging Zones in the Global Map

The movement is global, but it manifests differently across regions.

1. North America (Canada, United States)

Web poetry, conceptual digital art, video-poetry, luminous explorations, hybrid artworks exploring AI-assisted poetics.

This is where I create and publish.
My site, my series, my poem-images belong to this North American space where Humanist Digital Art takes root.

2. Europe (France, Belgium, Germany)

Digital literature, visual poetry, intermedial forms.
Instapoetry is particularly influential.
Strong presence of socially engaged art that merges text and image.

3. Asia (Japan, Korea, India, China)

Minimalist, contemplative, luminous aesthetics.
Hybridizations between technology, symbolism, and spirituality.
A vision of augmented humanity.

4. Africa (West, East, Southern Africa)

Across the African continent, I see a vibrant digital creation scene led by a new generation of artists, poets, photographers, and hybrid creators.

Their works often explore:

  • personal and collective memory,
  • layered identities,
  • heritage and transmission,
  • light, color, symbolic patterns,
  • personal narratives expressed within a changing world.

Smartphones—widely used—become mobile studios for poetry, photography, montage, and visual experimentation.
Digital art there is intimate, political, sensitive—profoundly human.

Africa, too, contributes powerfully to the global movement of Humanist Digital Art.

5. How Humanist Digital Art Synthesizes These Tendencies

For me, Humanist Digital Art is defined by four elements:

1. The Human at the Center

The digital tool is not the subject.
It is the medium.
The human being thinks, feels, decides, orients.

2. Poetry + Image + Technology

Humanist Digital Art is an expanded form of writing.
Words become image.
Images become memory.
Poetry becomes light.

3. Sensitivity, Intimacy, Consciousness

Even in a world saturated with technologies, the depth of human experience remains.

4. Technopoetics

A poetics of the digital age, where technology becomes an extension of human sensitivity.

Technopoetics, within Humanist Digital Art, is not merely the use of tools:
it is the poetry of the relationship between human and machine—a place where the tool serves meaning.

In this perspective, the works are digital, but the intention is human.

Humanist Digital Art is, above all, a way of inhabiting our era—a creative posture centered on human experience, fragility, and inner light.

6. AI, the Digital, and the Human: Putting the Tool Back in Its Place

Many ask:
“Who creates—the artist or the AI?”

For me, the answer is simple.

When a painter holds a brush, no one says the brush is painting.
When a photographer frames a scene, no one says the camera is seeing.
When I use graphic software, no one imagines the computer has intention.

The same applies to AI.

AI can generate, amplify, transform.
But it feels nothing.
It remembers nothing.
It has no inner memory.

Humanist Digital Art affirms this:

👉 Human intelligence (HI) leads.
👉 AI is only a tool.
👉 The artwork is the space of human sensitivity, experience, and consciousness.

In my practice, I use many tools—graphic software, photos, drawings, sculptures—and AI, which is a technical collaborator, never an author.
It is a relay, never a source.

The artist remains the heart of the creative gesture.

7. Why I Speak of a Humanist Movement

I speak of Humanist Digital Art because I see a shared gesture emerging everywhere:
the desire to preserve the human voice in a world where tools grow more powerful each year.

Digital media become carriers of human sensitivity.
The web becomes a space for sharing emotions.

Artists everywhere affirm:

Humanity does not disappear with technology—it transforms.

In Humanist Digital Art, the tool is not at the center.
The human being is.

Their experience.
Their memory.
Their fragility.
Their inner light.

8. Conclusion

Humanist Digital Art is not an invention.
It is an illumination.
A discreet but global movement.

A way of observing what thousands of artists already create on the web:
works that speak of human experience, memory, light, doubt, joy, grief, and resilience.

This text becomes a first stone in a broader cartography—
a way to name what is already happening,
a vision in motion.

A way of saying we are not alone in this exploration:
we are many, across continents, using technology to better understand what it means to be human.

And if Humanist Digital Art had a motto, it might be this:

“The artwork is the concept. The human is the source.”

To situate this structural cartography within the corpus of Humanist Digital Art

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
Central structured entry point.

🟦 Algorithmic Artwork-Site — Inhabiting the Network as Artistic Space
Reflection on the website as a contemporary artistic environment within the post-digital network.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art: A Global Map of Creation in the Age of the Web
Complementary geographic overview.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — A New Artistic Movement?
Reflection on the emergence of a global orientation.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art: A Philosophy of the Human in the Technological Age
Philosophical grounding.

🟦 Art, Culture, and Humanity in the Algorithmic Age of Artificial Intelligence
Broader cultural reflection.

🟦 How the Concept of Humanist Digital Art Was Born
Genesis of the conceptual framework.


Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor

Humanist Digital Art: A Global Map of Creation in the Age of the Web

🟥 Lire cet article en français :
L’art numérique humaniste : cartographie mondiale de la création à l’ère du web

🔹 Explore the theoretical corpus of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

Affiche minimaliste Art Numérique Humaniste / Humanist Digital Art en noir et blanc, avec typographie sobre © Gilles Vallée

In this new world where AI occupies an increasingly prominent place, I remain, for my part, an HI — a Human Intelligence. I write, I create, I doubt, I feel. I bear witness to my era with my words, my images, and my sensitivity.

Origins of a Vision: Humanist Digital Art

For more than thirty years, I’ve witnessed the explosive evolution of the internet — from its slow emergence to its omnipresence at the center of our lives. This global revolution has transformed the way we communicate, create, and dream — and it has profoundly changed how art circulates and spreads.

I developed these reflections in my Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art, where I explore the place of digital tools in creation and in our relationship to the sensitive and the human.

Today, contemporary art is no longer limited to museums, galleries, or books: it circulates freely on the web, crossing time zones, languages, and platforms, becoming accessible to billions of people.

We live in an era shaped both by the promises of transhumanism and the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence. In this context, digital art is not only a new way of creating — it is a new way of circulating emotion on a global scale. It carries voices that might otherwise never have been heard.

And it is through this planetary flow that I have observed, for years, the emergence of a vast creative movement: a constellation of artists, poets, photographers, and videographers who use digital media as a sensitive language to speak about the human experience. I describe this gradual realization in How the Concept of Humanist Digital Art Was Born, where I return to the origins of my approach.

A Worldwide Creativity Without Borders

This digital creativity recognizes no borders and no institutional boundaries. It unfolds everywhere, simultaneously, under countless forms.

China

Web poetry — 网络诗歌 (wǎngluò shīgē) — has become a massive cultural phenomenon. On WeChat, Weibo, and other platforms, millions follow digital poets who reinvent the short form, the fragment, the luminous sentence paired with an image. A millennia-old poetic tradition finds new digital breath, sometimes experimental, sometimes minimalist, always rooted in lived human experience.

India

In this culturally and linguistically dense country, Instapoetry holds a surprisingly strong presence. One of the defining voices of the genre, Rupi Kaur, a Canadian poet of Indian origin, helped shape a worldwide movement where vulnerability, memory, the body, exile, and healing play central roles. Instapoetry circulates both in English and in regional languages, forming a vibrant network of digital poetry.

The English-speaking world

In the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia, Instapoetry has exploded. Social networks have become spaces for publishing, discussing, and experimenting visually. Short-form poetry travels at great speed, shared by millions.

The Francophonie

In France and Québec, Instapoetry and digital poetry have also taken root powerfully. On Instagram, Facebook, and X/Twitter, a new generation of poets publishes visual fragments, humanist reflections, and poetic images on a daily basis.

The Spanish-speaking world

From Spain to Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina, digital poetry has marked a decisive break with more traditional forms. Voices such as Elvira Sastre have shown how intimate, visual, digital writing can reach vast audiences online and in print.

Africa

Across Senegal, Nigeria, North Africa, and South Africa, digital creation is booming. On Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok, poets, visual artists, and performers share poetic fragments, digital collages, stylized portraits, and activist texts.
Africa, largely mobile-first, has transformed the phone into a creative space where poetry, memory, identity, humor, and resistance coexist. Instapoetry, web poetry, and humanist digital art form a living and profoundly human movement here too.

The Middle East

Instapoetry and digital writing are also growing rapidly throughout the Middle East. On Instagram and TikTok, many poets and visual artists publish short fragments, intimate texts, and engaged digital images, often tied to the region’s political, social, and identity issues. Arabic, English, and French intersect, giving rise to a living, sensitive, deeply human web poetry.

Everywhere, art circulates.
Everywhere, new forms emerge.
Everywhere, humanity expresses itself through pixels.

The Boom of Instapoetry and Digital Writing

This global phenomenon is not anecdotal. It represents a profound cultural transformation. I explored this in Humanist Digital Art — A New Artistic Movement?, where I explain how these practices, scattered across the world, already form a coherent and contemporary movement.

Instapoetry, web poetry, digital writing — regardless of the term — all describe the same evolution: textual and visual art has entered the culture of the “scroll.”

The poem is no longer only printed; it appears in a luminous flow, accompanied by an image, a graphic gesture, a texture, a color.

Digital creation becomes an extension of the human voice: short poems, haikus, prose fragments … To create Humanist Digital Art is to create with pixels — but to publish on the web is to take part in a global movement.

Poetry now lives in everyday gestures, in the act of scrolling, in the fragile memory of an image that lasts only seconds. But this brevity is not superficiality: it becomes a new form of intensity, and a powerful vector for the democratization of art.

Visual Artists: Digital as Human Material

Alongside these poets, thousands of visual artists shape digital material as one shapes clay, paint, stone, or light.

Some use glitch as a metaphor for human fragility. Others create distorted portraits, fractured landscapes, faces that speak of memory, identity, or loss. Still others produce generative images, introspective montages, melancholic compositions, or contemplative videos.

Digital media becomes human material.
A fragile mirror.
A tool to express what trembles within us.

Why I Propose the Term “Humanist Digital Art”

For years, I’ve observed that this movement — poetic, visual, digital, global — already exists everywhere.

It did not yet have a unifying name.
No shared conceptual frame.
No articulated coherence.

This is why I propose the term Humanist Digital Art: to offer an expression that gathers, clarifies, unifies. I expand on this in my Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art, where I outline the ethical, philosophical, and cultural principles of this vision.

I am not inventing a new movement.
I am recognizing one — naming it — making it visible.

I see in these digital works a common desire: to reinject poetry, emotion, intimacy, fragility, and engagement into the digital flow. To restore a place for the human within a world saturated with images. To make the digital a sensitive territory rather than a purely technical one.

My approach is rooted in ethical and philosophical questions:
What place does the digital tool occupy in creation?
How can it become a space of empathy and awareness?

My Role in This New Artistic Geography

Within this emerging world map, I stand as an observer, a creator, and a creative conduit.

I observe what circulates, transforms, and searches for itself. I create my own images, poems, digital works, and videos while thinking of the immense silent community expressing itself online every day.

I also write to name, illuminate, connect, and give meaning.
To propose a vision:
one of a digital art that speaks not of machines, but of human beings.
An art that interrogates memory and forgetting, light and fragility, time and emotion.
An art that crosses borders through millions of screens yet remains deeply intimate.

This, for me, is Humanist Digital Art.
A global, living, multiple movement that speaks of human experience.
A constellation of works that together draw a new geography of sensitivity.
And I am part of it.

And if the digital transforms how art circulates, it is up to us — creators — to ensure the human remains at the heart of this movement.

As for me, I am an HI — a Human Intelligence — carrying Humanist Digital Art across the web.

To situate this global mapping within the corpus of Humanist Digital Art

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
Central entry point to the structured framework.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — A New Artistic Movement?
Analysis of the global emergence of this orientation.

🟦 How the Concept of Humanist Digital Art Was Born
Genesis of the naming process.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art: A Global Map of Contemporary Creation
Complementary mapping focused on structural and conceptual dimensions.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art: A Philosophy of the Human in the Technological Age
Philosophical grounding of the human-centered approach.

🟦 Art, Culture, and Humanity in the Algorithmic Age of Artificial Intelligence
Broader cultural perspective on global digital infrastructures.

Blue gradient digital image with the text “I am an HI — a Human Intelligence”, minimalist design © Gilles Vallée.

© Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor

Humanist Digital Art — A New Artistic Movement ?

🟦 Read this article in French:
L’art numérique humaniste — un nouveau mouvement artistique ?

🔹 Central reference page
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

Minimalist reddish-brown image with a soft central glow and the title “Humanist Digital Art”, signed © Gilles Vallée.

Note to readers:
My website and most of my creative work are originally written in French.
You can easily translate any page using your browser’s translation feature to explore my poetic and visual world in your preferred language.


In this video, I present the essential ideas behind what I call Humanist Digital Art.

Video – Humanist Digital Art: presentation by Gilles Vallée

A question of naming

Is Humanist Digital Art a new artistic movement?

No.
What is new is the name.

The practices already exist. They circulate across social media, move between platforms, cross borders, and grow from intimate human experiences and social realities.

For more than fifteen years, I have observed artistic forms emerging online that use digital tools to speak about the human condition. What I propose is not to create something new, but to name what is already present.

Humanist Digital Art is an attempt to designate an artistic territory that exists, yet lacked a shared expression.


Naming a practice that already exists

What I call Humanist Digital Art is not something I invented. It is a constellation of digital practices centered on human experience: memory, fragility, anger, identity, vulnerability, resilience, and the search for meaning.

Across the web, thousands of artists use digital media to reflect who we are.

Among the most visible forms:

  • Instapoetry
  • Digital writing
  • Visual poetry
  • Poem-images
  • Socially engaged digital art
  • Political digital art
  • Digital haiku
  • Hybrid works combining poetry, photography, typography, and video

These practices are diverse in form, but they share a common orientation: technology used in the service of human expression.

Together, they form not a centralized school, but a broad, dynamic field.

After more than twenty years creating and publishing digital poetry, poem-images, poetic videos, and digital sculptures, I felt the need to name this field — not to limit it, but to clarify its coherence.

I explored this in How the Concept of Humanist Digital Art Was Born and in the Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art, where I propose a simple principle:

Technology in the service of human experience.


A global and polymorphous field

I am not trying to create a movement.
I am recognizing one.

It is global. It includes well-known artists, emerging creators, and anonymous voices. It unfolds across platforms, cultures, and languages.

Digital media becomes a space where:

  • social fractures are expressed
  • inner wounds are articulated
  • poetic impulses take form
  • political tensions are witnessed
  • memory is preserved

Some works are hybrid: physically created, digitally amplified.

Banksy is a striking example. His art is physical, but its global impact exists through digital circulation.

In another field, Rupi Kaur’s poetry became globally recognized through online diffusion. The digital space became not just a tool, but a living medium.

These examples illustrate a broader phenomenon: digital infrastructure amplifies human expression.

Humanist Digital Art emerges within this context.


What I mean by Humanist Digital Art

Humanist Digital Art is first a stance.

It means using technology to speak about the human being — not to replace or overshadow it.

It is an art attentive to:

  • memory
  • fragility
  • resilience
  • consciousness
  • vulnerability
  • dignity

In my own practice, this takes the form of:

  • poem-images
  • poetry integrated into digital compositions
  • luminous digital imagery
  • reflections on memory and forgetting
  • introspective first-person writing

I do not position myself above this field.
I am one of its voices.

If I propose this term, it is to offer a lens — a shared language for describing practices already present.


What Humanist Digital Art is not

To clarify its identity, it is useful to distinguish it from other digital practices.

It is not:

  • technological spectacle
  • performance centered on technical prowess
  • art generated without human intention
  • purely algorithmic experimentation detached from lived experience
  • market-driven crypto-art
  • or a simple derivative of generative AI

Nor is it reducible to social or political digital art, although overlaps may exist.

The difference lies in orientation.

Social digital art focuses on collective issues.
Political digital art responds to contemporary political realities.
Humanist Digital Art focuses first on lived inner experience.

Technology remains a medium.
The human remains the center.


Why name it now?

After years of creating and observing, I felt the moment had come to gather these practices under a clear expression.

Naming does not create reality.
It reveals coherence.

To name is not to claim authority, but to clarify perception.

Humanist Digital Art offers a framework for artists who:

  • use digital media to speak about lived experience
  • seek sensitivity rather than spectacle
  • treat technology as a language, not a goal

It proposes a vocabulary for describing a tendency already active in contemporary digital culture.


Conclusion: recognition, not invention

Humanist Digital Art is not a movement I invented.
It is a field I recognize — and to which I contribute.

Digital infrastructures now shape global artistic circulation. Within them, many artists use technology to speak about what we share:

our humanity.


To situate this reflection within the Humanist Digital Art corpus

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
🟦 How the Concept of Humanist Digital Art Was Born
🟦 Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 Evolving Cartography of Humanist Digital Art
🟦 From Humanist Digital Art to an Algorithmic Media Art Project
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Clarifying a Thought in Motion


Transparency and Intellectual Honesty

After describing my personal approach as Humanist Digital Art, I discovered that the creative company 4D ART, founded by Michel Lemieux, also uses this expression in its public identity.

Their formulation refers specifically to immersive stage productions and multimedia creations.

My usage differs. It arises from a poetic and visual practice and aims to describe a broader global artistic tendency observed among artists using digital media to express human experience.

Out of respect and intellectual honesty, I acknowledge that 4D ART has used this expression for many years in a distinct context.


© Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor
2026

How the Concept of Humanist Digital Art Was Born

🟦 Read this article in French:
Comment est né le concept d’art numérique humaniste

🔹 Central reference page
🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments

Between social art, political art, and visual poetry, my artistic approach unfolds within Humanist Digital Art — a digital practice centered on the human being and the human experience.

Blue digital artwork symbolizing Humanist Digital Art, an introspective variation of the manifesto by Gilles Vallée, digital artist and poet.

This article expands upon the Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art. Here, I tell the story of how this expression came to me one day in November 2025, after more than two decades of creating in visual poetry and digital art. It is the story of an artistic awakening — the moment I understood that technology could become a language for expressing the human experience.

When an expression imposes itself

One day in November 2025, a phrase suddenly came to mind: “Humanist Digital Art.”
That day, I realized I had finally found the right words to describe my approach, my process, and my artistic vision.

After more than twenty years exploring digital imagery, experimenting with poetry, and searching for ways to speak about life, memory, and emotion through technology, I understood that my work revolved around one simple idea: using digital art to speak about the human condition.

For a long time, I knew I was evolving in the world of digital writing, visual poetry, and Instapoetry.
Yet none of these expressions fully described what I was doing.

When the phrase Humanist Digital Art appeared in my mind, everything aligned — as if I had finally named a territory I had been exploring all along, without knowing its name.

Naming a practice before it exists

Out of curiosity, I searched the web to see if other artists were using this expression. To my surprise, there were almost no references. That’s when I realized that although this idea already existed in practice, it had not yet been named.

Many artists — like myself — merge poetry, digital imagery, and new technologies to reflect on the human experience.
Yet few have felt the need to define this approach.
So I decided to name it.
Not to claim ownership, but to clarify my own path and signature.
I called it Humanist Digital Art — an art that uses technology to reveal what is most profoundly human: fragility, light, memory, courage, and connection.

From digital writing to humanist consciousness

My artistic journey began with visual arts and poetry. Over time, I sought to bring the two closer together — to unite word and image.

I explored photography of my sculptures, digital prints, poetic images, and visual haikus. This exploration naturally led me toward what we now call digital writing — a field where literature meets the digital realm.

I was surprised to see my name appear in the Repertoire of Digital Writings, an academic project mapping contemporary digital literary creation. That recognition strengthened my conviction that my work was part of a broader movement — one where artists and poets compose and publish online, turning the digital space into a true field of creation, not just promotion.

In my poetic series, this practice has often taken the form of social and political art — a form of social poetry where image and word become acts of awareness. I’ve always perceived digital creation as a space where art can simultaneously bear witness, denounce, and heal.

Yet something was still missing from that vocabulary: the human dimension.

When technology becomes a language of the human

Through my visual poems, calligrams, and digital art videos, I’ve always sought to express what we are: our doubts, our sparks, our silences, our survivals. I don’t seek to make technology the subject of my work, but rather a medium of sensitivity — a bridge between emotion and light.

I believe algorithms can coexist with emotion — that digital creation can become a form of living memory.

That belief led me to write the Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art, to articulate this vision. In it, I propose that digital tools and platforms can become poetic and emotional languages — as long as they remain at the service of consciousness, beauty, and human truth.

A movement that already exists — but needed a name

I don’t claim to have invented a new practice. I describe and observe a tendency already present within contemporary digital culture. What I propose is simply to name a reality that already exists: that of artists, poets, and creators who use digital tools not to escape from humanity, but to explore it more deeply — to speak of life, death, memory, and hope.

Humanist Digital Art is an aesthetic of presence in an age of dematerialization. It is an art of connection, communication, and resonance.

An expression born from experience

Today, I see this expression as a synthesis of my entire artistic path. From my early sculptures to my digital poems, from the videos on my YouTube channel to the poetic series on my website — everything converges toward this idea: to make digital art an art of the living.

This is the essence of my work: a Humanist Digital Art — where technology becomes light, poetry becomes memory, and the human being remains at the heart of creation.


This article is part of my broader reflection on Humanist Digital Art — an approach where poetry, image, and technology converge to speak of humanity and the human experience.

If you want to explore how this practice has become a global movement, you can also read:
Humanist Digital Art — A New Artistic Movement?

Transparency and Intellectual Honesty Note

After beginning to describe my personal approach as humanist digital art, and after observing that this perspective reflects a global artistic tendency present on the web for many years, I discovered that the creative company 4D ART, founded by the artist Michel Lemieux, also uses this expression in its public identity.

Their formulation – “Humanist Digital Art – Digital Pioneers + Story Creators since 1983” – refers specifically to their immersive stage productions and multimedia creations.

My usage is different: it arises from a poetic and visual practice, and is meant to name a broader global artistic reality observed among thousands of artists, poets, and creators who use digital media to express the human experience.

Out of intellectual honesty and respect for their work, I consider it important to acknowledge that 4D ART has used this expression for many years in a context distinct from my own. To my knowledge, no other artist or organization is currently using this expression in a similar way.

🟦 Related articles:

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Theoretical Corpus and Developments
Central structured reference page.

🟦 Manifesto of Humanist Digital Art
First stabilization of vocabulary.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — Clarifying a Thought in Motion
Conceptual hierarchy.

🟦 From Humanist Digital Art to an Algorithmic Media Art Project
Transformation into a media project.

🟦 Evolving Cartography of Humanist Digital Art
Current state of the field.

🟦 Humanist Digital Art — A New Artistic Movement?
Positioning within contemporary art.

Note to readers:
Most of my work is originally written in French. I invite you to explore it freely using your browser’s translation tool — and to discover how words, images, and emotions come together in my artistic universe.


© Gilles Vallée | Humanist Digital Artist, Poet, Sculptor

Comprendre les dictateurs : Profil psychologique et mécanismes de pouvoir

Comprendre les dictateurs et leurs mécanismes de pouvoir : analyse psychologique des traits autoritaires pour mieux dénoncer les régimes totalitaires.

Texte suivant écrit en blanc sur un fond rouge: Tout le monde doit dénoncer les dictatures et les dictateurs.
Dénoncer les dictateurs pour un meilleur avenir

Cet article fait partie de la série
Réflexions sur l’art, la poésie et la culture
→ Voir la série complète

Dans un monde où les régimes autoritaires gagnent du terrain, il est crucial de comprendre les mécanismes psychologiques qui sous-tendent les dictatures. Cet article explore les traits de personnalité communs aux dictateurs et les stratégies qu’ils emploient pour asseoir leur pouvoir, afin de mieux les identifier et les dénoncer. Cette réflexion s’inscrit dans une approche plus large du rôle de l’art et de la culture face aux enjeux politiques et sociaux contemporains.

Note : Cet article est aussi disponible en anglais : Understanding Dictators: Psychological Profile and Mechanisms of Power.

Traits psychologiques des dictateurs

Contexte

Mon site présente mon travail en poésie et en art numérique humaniste mais pour ce texte je désirais traiter du thème de la dictature et des traits de personnalité des dictateurs. Ce texte s’éloigne de la poésie, mais l’art et la poésie ont aussi une portée sociale et politique… Dans le contexte géopolitique actuel (avec des dirigeants et des états qui ont des visées impérialistes) tout le monde doit dénoncer les dictatures et les dictateurs. Ce n’est peut-être pas poétique, mais c’est essentiel pour l’avenir de l’humanité.

J’ai demandé à l’IA ChatGPT d’identifier les caractéristiques psychologiques des dictateurs. Voici une liste concise mettant en lumière les traits communs à ces figures autoritaires : égocentrisme, paranoïa, manipulation, absence d’empathie, culte de la personnalité, et bien d’autres. Ces éléments permettent de mieux comprendre leur mode de pensée et leur quête obsessionnelle du pouvoir absolu.

Cette réflexion rejoint ma démarche d’art numérique humaniste (ANH), où l’art et la culture participent à une prise de conscience du monde, en mettant en lumière les mécanismes de pouvoir, les dérives autoritaires et les enjeux humains contemporains.

Art numérique humaniste — Corpus théorique et développements

Vidéo — Dénoncer les dictateurs pour un meilleur avenir

Cette vidéo accompagne l’article Comprendre les dictateurs : Profil psychologique et mécanismes de pouvoir.
Elle propose, sous une forme visuelle lente et minimaliste, une synthèse des principaux traits psychologiques que l’on retrouve chez les dirigeants autoritaires.

La vidéo ne cherche pas à divertir, mais à créer un espace de réflexion et de conscience, avant d’entrer plus en profondeur dans l’analyse écrite qui suit.

La vidéo offre une vue d’ensemble visuelle et conceptuelle des schémas psychologiques abordés dans cet article.

L’analyse écrite ci-dessous approfondit ces traits, leurs mécanismes de pouvoir et leurs conséquences dans le contexte géopolitique contemporain.

Liste : traits psychologiques des dictateurs

Ces dirigeants autoritaires partagent souvent des caractéristiques psychologiques bien identifiables. Voici les traits les plus courants que l’on retrouve chez eux :

Égocentrisme exacerbé

– Se perçoit comme un être supérieur, infaillible.

Narcissisme pathologique

– Besoin constant d’admiration et de glorification

Paranoïa

– Méfiance extrême, obsession des complots et des ennemis imaginaires

Manque d’empathie

– Indifférence totale à la souffrance des autres

Autoritarisme rigide

– Refus de toute opposition, volonté de contrôle absolu

Manipulation et duplicité

– Maîtrise de la propagande, mensonge comme outil de pouvoir

Mégalomanie

– Désir de grandeur, projets démesurés, culte de la personnalité

Impulsivité et agressivité

– Réactions violentes face aux défis ou critiques

Sadisme latent

– Prend du plaisir à humilier et punir ses opposants

Besoin de domination

– Fascination pour le pouvoir absolu, écrasement des adversaires

Pensée binaire

– Ami ou ennemi, aucune nuance tolérée

Népotisme et favoritisme

– S’entoure d’un cercle de fidèles pour mieux asseoir son règne

Déni de réalité

– Réécrit l’histoire et s’enferme dans ses propres illusions

Obsession du contrôle

– Surveillance généralisée, élimination de toute dissidence

Psychopathie potentielle

– Absence totale de remords ou de culpabilité

Et l’avenir ?

La démocratie est fragile. Que faisons-nous aujourd’hui pour la protéger de ceux qui veulent la détruire ?

Être informé, c’est déjà un premier pas vers la résistance. Comprendre, nommer et reconnaître ces mécanismes est essentiel pour ne pas laisser l’histoire se répéter.

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Gilles Vallée | Artiste Numérique Humaniste, Poète, Sculpteur