A Million Random Digits, The Rand Corporation, 1955.
"Random Chromatics Performance" with Harry Alexander, Alice Anderson, Jon Caruana, Yen Ching, Valérie Ebuwa, Saju Hari, Zinzi Marsh, Moses Ward, gathering scrap wood in a dance where shapes and colours randomly meet, 2020.
"Random Chromatics performances - Pixels sculptures" installation of various dimensions, 2021
"Random Chromatics Performance" with Alice Anderson, Jon Caruana, Valerie Ebuwa, Eline Peres, James Olivo gathering scrap wood into a dance where shapes and colours randomly meet, 2022.
"Random Chromatics performances - Pixels sculptures" installation of various dimensions, 2020.
I Ching, Ancient Chinese book of change, by Neil Powell and Kieron Connolly, 2019
The “Pixels” sculptures are the result of “Random Chromatic” performances, in which colors and shapes randomly meet through dance. This method references Alan Turing’s oracle machine, an abstract machine solving decision problems.