Artist Ant Hamlyn is exhibiting his latest collection, Soft // Chrome, at the Better Go South gallery in Stuttgart, featuring synthetic botanical sculptures that blend Y2K-era digital aesthetics with post-digital anxiety. According to the gallery, the works utilize hand-sewn metallic fabrics, polyurethane, and architectural fiberboard to explore how humans maintain a connection to nature within increasingly manufactured environments.
How Y2K Aesthetics Are Reshaping Contemporary Sculpture
The visual language of the early 2000s—characterized by early computer graphics, sci-fi tropes, and pop-punk culture—is experiencing a resurgence in fine art. Hamlyn’s work taps into this era, using materials like extruded acrylic and metallic fabrics to mimic the “liquid metal” sheen common in legacy software interfaces. According to Better Go South, this approach serves as a critique of our historical optimism regarding technology, contrasted against the growing unease of the current post-digital landscape.
The Y2K aesthetic, or “Frutiger Aero,” is defined by its glossy, high-tech, and nature-inspired imagery, which was prevalent in early tech branding and CD-ROM interfaces.
Why Synthetic Botanicals Are Gaining Traction
Artists are increasingly turning to non-organic materials to replicate natural forms, highlighting the tension between the artificial and the biological. Hamlyn’s pieces, such as Soft // Chrome Pink Daisies and Soft // Chrome Fly Traps, use fiber stuffing and polyurethane to create cartoonish, tactile versions of real-world flora. By stripping away the organic life cycle and replacing it with permanent, industrial components, the work forces viewers to engage with nature as a static, manufactured object rather than a living system.

Comparing Digital Nostalgia to Physical Reality
While digital artists often use software to render surreal botanicals, Hamlyn’s transition into physical sculpture marks a shift toward material-heavy, tactile installations. This mirrors a broader trend in the design world, where the “phygital”—the blending of physical and digital design—becomes a primary method for expressing modern identity. Unlike digital-only art, these sculptures require stainless steel fixings and architectural fiberboard, grounding the ethereal aesthetic of the internet in physical, durable weight.
Pro Tips for Engaging with Post-Digital Art
- Look for Materiality: Pay attention to the contrast between soft materials like fiber stuffing and rigid ones like extruded acrylic; this tension often carries the artist’s main message.
- Analyze the Scale: Works like Soft // Chrome Mushrooms, which measure 120 centimeters in height, use scale to distort the viewer’s perception of natural objects.
- Contextualize the Era: Research the specific technological milestones of the early 2000s to better understand the “optimism” the artist is referencing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where can I view Ant Hamlyn’s Soft // Chrome exhibition?
The collection is available for viewing by appointment at the Better Go South gallery in Stuttgart.

What materials are used in these sculptures?
According to the exhibition specifications, the works are constructed from a combination of hand-sewn metallic fabrics, fiber stuffing, polyurethane-coated fabric, upholstered architectural fiberboard, extruded acrylic, and stainless steel fixings.
What does the term “post-digital” mean in this context?
In this artistic context, it refers to a state where digital technology is so deeply integrated into daily life that its novelty has faded, replaced by an awareness of the anxieties and psychological impacts caused by constant connectivity.
Have you encountered art that blends digital nostalgia with physical sculpture? Share your thoughts in the comments below or explore more artist features in our archives.
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