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Vera Molnar Dreamed in Algorithms, Paris and Budapest Blinked

Long before digital art became a buzzword, Vera Molnar was already plotting her own creative revolutions with machines—real and imagined. In the 1960s, she invented her "machine imaginaire," a set of self-imposed rules that mimicked the logic of computers, letting chance and repetition redraw the boundaries of abstraction. Molnar’s early sketches turned landscapes into crisp circles and lines, hinting at her lifelong fascination with geometry. By the time computers entered her studio, she was feeding punch cards into hulking IBM machines, waiting days for a single result—yet the results were anything but mechanical. Her grids and patterns, often playful and subtly rebellious, broke the rules of modernist dogma and invited disorder into order. Even as her work faced skepticism, Molnar’s experiments quietly seeded the future of digital art. Decades later, her influence pulses through everything from kinetic sculptures to NFTs, proving that a single artist’s curiosity can outpace the technology of her time—and leave the rest of us racing to catch up. #VeraMolnar #DigitalArtPioneer #ComputerArt #Culture

16 days ago
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