ADAM MARTINAKIS // 'I Shape Ideas'
- Felipe Rodríguez-Mattern
- Apr 2
- 2 min read
'And ideas shape me...'
Images by Adam Martinakis ©
Texts & Content Curation by
Felipe Rodríguez-Mattern.

Adam Martinakis has crafted a visual universe where technology and human emotion converge in a deeply symbolic symbiosis. His work, defined by meticulously crafted 3D digital sculptures, stands as a meditation on existence, perception, and the fundamental emotions of the human experience.
Critics highlight Martinakis’s ability to transcend the boundaries of digital art, transforming it into a philosophical tool for existential exploration. His figures—ethereal and fragmented—seem to oscillate between solidity and dissolution, evoking the fragility of human experience in an era dominated by technology.
In his work, Martinakis weaves together principles of classical sculpture with the aesthetics of digital futurism, creating a visual narrative where anatomy becomes a vehicle for philosophical exploration. The intersection of mathematical precision and the emotional depth of his compositions is one of the most praised aspects of his work.
His visual universe echoes both surrealism and symbolism in an effort to capture the complexity of human emotions. In his pieces, bodies appear assembled from geometric structures, pierced by beams of light, or immersed in a dreamlike space that evokes the vastness of the subconscious.
Martinakis unfolds a poetics of emptiness and absence, where his figures seem to dissolve into particles or merge with their surroundings. This fragmentation of form not only alludes to the evanescence of identity in the digital age but also introduces a discourse on the fragility of human connections.
In a world where technology asserts itself as the mediator of experience, Martinakis’s work offers a reflection on the individual’s condition within a hybrid space between the tangible and the virtual. His exploration of the body as an interface for emotion and memory positions him uniquely within contemporary digital art.

Art That Transcends the Digital
Far from treating digital art as a mere technical exercise, Adam Martinakis elevates it to an introspective dimension, where form deconstructs and reconfigures itself to reveal the very essence of existence. His work, suspended between solidity and evanescence, confronts us with the paradox of modernity—the search for connection in a world where materiality seems to dissolve.
Adam Martinakis eas born in Lubań, Poland in 1972