I believe true art balances chaos and order. It holds space for precision and imperfection logic shaped by emotion.
ARTIST BIO
Gábor Bazsali is a Budapest-based architect exploring the thin line between code and emotion. Fascinated by mechanisms and DIY, he built his own pen plotter to turn algorithms into living lines and crafted his art practice around precision and chance. Inspired by Vera Molnar’s generative clarity, he composes order out of chaos. Each Lineworkart piece begins as geometric code in Grasshopper, shaped by intuition, then comes alive through the plotter’s imperfect dance on paper. His limited works answer the world’s noise with quiet balance a space where digital logic and human presence breathe together, and silence draws its own lines.
- Web: https://lineworkart.hu/
- Instagram: @linework.art
- Tiktok: @lineworkart
- X: @penplotart
- Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Lineworkart






What Is one belief, insight, or idea that guides your creative process?
I believe true art balances chaos and order. It holds space for precision and imperfection logic shaped by emotion.
Can you tell us how you discovered Mixed art and what drew you into it?
I discovered it at a Vera Molnar show in Budapest her simplicity and code-based art showed me how deeply a line can speak.
What do you think defines your style or creative approach, and how did you arrive at that identity?
A dialogue between man and machine: geometry, algorithms, magnetic fields, and small human flaws create my signature calm, coded works.
How does a project usually begin for you? Do you have a creative ritual or structure you follow?
It starts with an idea or a force field I want to distort. Many times I search for the hidden algorithm behind an idea this kind of “reverse engineering” pulls me into pure excitement.
What tools or technologies do you use most, and how do they influence your visual language?
Grasshopper for algorithms, a pen plotter for physical output together they turn my thoughts into tangible, layered drawings.
Do you feel there Is a strong generative art scene? What would you like to see evolve in it
It’s growing, but needs more bridges to the art world and collectors. I’d love to see more physical, plotter-based works shown live.
What advice would you give to someone who wants to start creating generative art but doesn’t know where to begin?
Let’s try it do it yourself. I built my own machine. Try to understand how a CNC machine works, how the algorithm works. Start simple, plot your first line, and learn by experimenting.