In a time when the digital and physical feel like separate worlds, artist Rutger Paulusse seems to erase the line between them.
His work looks like something pulled from a computer screen, yet it’s right there in front of you, glowing and tangible.
His New Dutch Minimalism collection carries the precision of design but softens it with warmth and curiosity.




The Dutch artist and designer takes geometry and gives it pulse and personality. Clean lines and perfect curves suddenly feel alive, as if they’re stretching or inhaling.
His layered acrylic sculptures shimmer in color gradients that shift with light and movement. They’re part design, part illusion, part something else entirely.

Paulusse began his creative path in graffiti and typography, and you can still sense that energy. The balance between control and freedom.

Between shape and motion. His pieces seem to hover in the space between digital render and hand-built object, so much that it almost stops mattering which one they are.

The forms feel both futuristic and organic, like they might float away if you looked at them long enough.














Images © Copyright Rutger Paulusse.
The post New Dutch Minimalism That Blurs the Line Between Physical and Digital appeared first on Moss and Fog.
