Inconvergent is the digital workshop of Anders Hoff – an artist and programmer exploring the boundaries between mathematics, algorithms, and visual art. The site is a collection of generative experiments, interactive essays, and tools that reveal how computational procedures can produce images resembling natural, organic structures.
At the core of the project are visualizations created through code. Hoff openly shares algorithms, demonstrating how complex patterns can emerge from simple rules. His works often resemble neural networks, living organisms, or geometric landscapes, while remaining abstract and mesmerizing.
The website also features detailed essays explaining the creative process: how small changes in algorithms affect the resulting visuals, what kinds of randomness are introduced, and how mathematical logic can be blended with artistic intuition. This unique mix turns Inconvergent into both a technical archive and an aesthetic journey.
Rather than being a commercial platform or traditional portfolio, Inconvergent is an open laboratory of ideas, where code becomes an artistic medium and visitors can feel immersed in the creative process. As such, it has inspired designers, programmers, and researchers in data visualization around the world.