# Jeff Davis: Where Math Meets Color > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/jeff-davis-where-math-meets-color) > Author: Anonymous > Date: 2026-02-18 **A journey through five works from generative art's quiet structuralist** Before computers were common tools in studios, Jeff Davis was already thinking algorithmically. As a math major at Lawrence University adding studio art to his studies, he approached canvas the way others approached equations -- searching for underlying structure, distilling the world into line, form, and color. That dual fluency would become his signature. When Seth Goldstein from Bright Moments reached out in early 2021, Davis saw something he'd been missing. Pre-pandemic, his goal had always been to bring people together in physical space, to share work with them in real time. The isolation sharpened that longing. Bright Moments offered a way back -- blending digital creativity with physical exhibition, turning collectors into participants. What followed was a nearly three-year tour across the world, each city inspiring a new body of work. Each piece carries the DNA of its location while remaining unmistakably Davis: precise, chromatic, alive. ## Reflection (New York, November 2021) New York was personal. An Art Blocks Playground project, *Reflection* was minted IRL at Bright Moments Gallery over two days -- November 18th and 19th, 2021 -- with 100 pieces revealed individually to collectors in the room. For Davis, exhibiting in New York was a dream realized. He used the project to reflect on his artistic career and the relationships he'd developed along the way. The mirror-like shapes evoke memories of love and connection rendered through color. It was also a chance to share his generative art practice with longtime supporters who'd followed his work since the pre-NFT days of physical printmaking. *Reflection* loops back to the beginning while pointing forward. ## Formation (London, July 2022) London was a return. As an undergrad, Davis spent a semester abroad there -- adding studio art to his math major, preparing for his thesis exhibition. The city, the museums, the intellectual independence, his future wife. All of it shaped his nascent practice. During that period, his work became increasingly reductive. He distilled surroundings into their most basic elements: line, form, color. The building blocks. *Formation* revisits those first principles. The algorithm is tuned to an earlier aesthetic, one Davis was exploring when computers weren't yet common art-making tools and his practice focused on traditional printmaking. But where his student work sought to discover structure through manual reduction, algorithmic processes now allow random determination within a structured framework. Through computation and iteration, *Formation* reveals structural essence. The results are diverse yet related: strong colors, austere geometric forms. Davis's first NFT print project, collectors received a unique archival pigment print alongside their token. ## LED (Tokyo, May 2023) Davis had never been to Tokyo, but he'd grown up surrounded by its innovations. *LED* takes its thematic starting point from display technology -- specifically how digital screens express color through red, green, and blue pixels. He broke each hue down to its RGB components, exploring the full range of color possibilities in projected light. The work examines how primary colors of light mix and leans into optical effects that emerge from that interplay. Then came the setting: Asakura House, a traditional Japanese space. Davis had started *LED* before understanding where it would be shown. Custom wooden, battery-operated stands were crafted for the frames, arranged meditatively throughout the historic house. "It created a really interesting dynamic in my mind that I was bridging this world between digital technology and old traditional ways," Davis said. The juxtaposition -- wooden stands holding digital artwork -- surpassed all expectations. ## Cuadro (Buenos Aires, November 2023) Argentina called for color research. Davis began by studying South American textiles -- the prominent hues found in blankets, tapestries, and fabrics. That's where the palette originated. *Cuadro* is an exploration of visual proportion in two parts. First: a linear framework, broadly inspired by Davis's long-term interest in architecture and how we divide space into discrete units. The rich sense of proportion and seriality he'd observed in Japanese architectural elements during his Tokyo trip carried over. The algorithm creates proportionally sized rows, then divides each row into columns. Every output generates a unique rectangular composition. Second: color accents that system. The algorithm selects either an analogous or complementary color harmony, then picks hues from the textile-derived palette to accent rows proportionally. The title came to Davis in Lisbon, where he spotted the Portuguese word "quadro" on a sign. He found "cuadro" -- the Spanish parallel -- and discovered it means painting, frame, squares, checkerboard, charts, tables, diagrams. All of it applied. Collectors received a 24-by-30-inch archival print alongside their NFT. ## Culmination (Paris, February 2024) This is the capstone. The eighth and final piece in Davis's Bright Moments tour, *Culmination* represents nearly three years of making art with the collective. It started as an ambitious attempt to directly integrate elements from all seven previous projects into a single work -- literally combining pieces of previous algorithms. The approach proved unwieldy, lacking coherence. So Davis stripped it back, creating a single engine: rows and columns of shapes, colored in various ways. The new approach let *Culmination* truly reflect what he'd learned. A single central figure recalls *Portal*. Dense grids echo *LED*. Flat colors reference *Formation* and *Cuadro*. Gradients nod to *Reflection*, *Inflection*, and *Transcendence*. Margins and white backgrounds honor his print-focused projects. Full-screen views and animation reference the digitally native work. Where previous projects drew from specific locations, *Culmination* is referential to the entire body of work -- a collective reflection encapsulating three years expressed in a single, cohesive artwork. Jeff Davis doesn't make loud work. There are no gimmicks, no attention-seeking tricks. What you get is the opposite: a quiet rigor, a sensitivity to color that comes from someone who truly understands it -- mathematically and intuitively. His Bright Moments journey shows how constraint becomes freedom. Each city's context pushed the work somewhere new, but the underlying logic remained consistent: divide space proportionally, treat color systematically, let the algorithm find variations within structure. For collectors, holding pieces across this arc means holding a map of an artist's evolution -- from the personal nostalgia of *Reflection* to the technical homage of *LED*, from the cultural research of *Cuadro* to the homecoming of *Formation*, culminating in a work that contains all of it. That's the thing about Davis. The math is always there, but so is the meaning.