Pascal Dombis

[1] The fractalist show gathered various artist under this concept, such as like Miguel Chevalier, Carlos Ginzburg, Jean-Claude Meynard (in French), Nabil Nahas and Joseph Nechvatal.

When rules are input in an excessive process, new and unpredictable forms come to the fore and generate the unlikely;[2] which is not dissimilar with the way the Surrealist exquisite corpse operated.

[4] Frank Popper wrote: "It is interesting to note that Dombis sees his interactive computational methodology as a kind of arte povera within new technology.

His work was included in the 2008 retrospective Imaging by numbers: a historical view of the computer print at the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art in Evanston, Illinois.

In 2010, Dombis realized Text(e)~Fil(e)s, a monumental 252 meter long floor ribbon commissioned by the French Ministry of Culture for the Palais-Royal in Paris.

[6] In 2016, Pascal Dombis and Gil Percal created Ligne-Flux, a permanent glass public artwork that covers the entire under-face of a footbridge which links 2 buildings of the École nationale supérieure d'architecture in Strasbourg France.

Based on line-curve proliferation and random color, the artwork produces a vibrant visual effect as one walks under the bridge and offers another kind of mapping in which networks, connections and flows come into play.