Digital meets Culture
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Export date: Thu Sep 18 16:21:29 2025 / +0000 GMT

Digital art and mental art


“In morte di Isgrò”, Andrea Paoli, opera digitale NFT



Digital art and mental art

We could say that digital art was born as conceptual art, since it finds its root in immateriality, and is immaterial because it exists only in thought: the object of art does not truly exist and, being useless, it is relegated to a temporary and unstable condition of the work. Thus, once the work is stripped of the object, it acquires the characteristics of ubiquity and of being impossible to fix in a single, definitive representation.

Yet, despite this premise, anyone familiar with today's digital art scene cannot help but object that most works produced through digital means cannot, today, be defined as conceptual (at least not according to the classical definition of the movement). On the contrary, one could argue the opposite: the majority of these works are visual masturbations that have little to do with signaling a thought—kitsch art made even more kitsch by the “innovative” medium, which lends a semblance of exclusivity.

Given these considerations, we can affirm that digital art is, in truth, not conceptual art; rather, it is an art that is born and lives within thought itself—what we might call mental art. Of course, there are beautiful thoughts and stupid thoughts, good thoughts and bad thoughts, and this art that emerges, grows, and develops outside of the object is nothing more than thought itself, which can in turn be beautiful, stupid, good, bad, and so on.

Continuing this line of reasoning, we can analyze the key difference between conceptual art and the art that lives within the concept—that is, mental art. In experiencing the former, one must proceed by decoding: breaking down the elements of the work in order to grasp the underlying thought. In experiencing the latter, one must instead proceed by coding: contextualizing, reconstructing the whole from a fragment. It is the same difference as between perceiving a complex thought that must be divided into parts and perceiving a fragment of that same thought, zoomed in so many times that one can see its very cells.

This type of art is also a natural consequence of the development of intelligent systems: a neural network, reproducing mathematically the mechanisms of the brain, will result in a raw thought made visible through a sign. Having moved from art as the signal of a thought (conceptual art) to art inside thought itself, enabled by the digital (mental art), as we have said, there is no longer any need to decode anything.

Art of this kind is often perceived as banal because the whole body of thought is replaced by the finger. While in conceptual art one had to strip away a clothed body (resting on the support of the object) to reach the naked body, in mental art only the finger is shown, in all its details. What is analyzed, through zooming in, is the complex system itself.

My work “Material Page and Immaterial Page – Luminous Meanings Behind a Paper Sky”, exhibited at the Bastione del Parlascio as part of the exhibition Unframed (a title that itself refers to a dimension beyond the object), is situated in this line of research by placing in relation two pages: the material one made of paper and the spiritual-virtual one of the digital. The zoom into thought is composed of a series of “is” because everything—note carefully, everything, not just every word—is made of signifiers that come to signify only through their referential process. Everything, in other words, is a collection of small attributions of meaning; thus, everything is a collection of “is” that together build the greater thought, a vast complex of micro-references.

It is a point in a line of research that lies between conceptual art, which signals thought, and mental art, born already within thought.

Andrea Paoli