-paradisebirds- Casey Valery 03. Apr 2026

In this sense, -ParadiseBirds- 03 is not about birds at all, but about the longing for a nature that never existed, preserved and perverted by machine learning. The artist offers no resolution, only an endless, shimmering archive of false memories. Casey Valery’s -ParadiseBirds- 03 stands as a significant contribution to digital art’s engagement with ecological grief and post-colonial critique. By hybridizing generative AI with the visual language of scientific illustration, Valery forces viewers to confront the paradox of representation in the Anthropocene: the more precisely we capture nature, the more it becomes synthetic. The work does not mourn the loss of birds, but rather the loss of the very idea of an original.

Author: [Your Name] Course: New Media Theory & Digital Aesthetics Date: April 17, 2026 Abstract This paper examines the digital media artwork -ParadiseBirds- 03 by contemporary artist Casey Valery, a piece that operates at the intersection of generative AI, ornithological illustration, and post-internet aesthetics. Through a close reading of the work’s visual language, procedural generation techniques, and archival framing, this analysis argues that -ParadiseBirds- 03 functions as a critique of both colonial natural history collections and the algorithmic reproduction of nature in the age of synthetic media. Valery’s piece reimagines the bird-of-paradix (Paradisaeidae) not as a biological specimen but as a glitched, evolving digital signal—a “paradise” that exists only within the latency of machine learning models. 1. Introduction Casey Valery, a relatively elusive figure in contemporary net art, gained attention with the -ParadiseBirds- series (2022–2025). The third iteration, -ParadiseBirds- 03 (2025), is a browser-based, generative artwork that produces infinite, non-repeating hybrid avian forms. Unlike traditional bird illustrations, Valery’s creations feature impossible plumage, asymmetrical iridescence, and anatomical features that morph between feather, fiber optic cable, and fractal noise. The “03” in the title suggests not only a version number but also a taxonomic cataloging gesture, parodying the Linnaean systems used by 19th-century naturalists like Ernst Mayr or Alfred Russel Wallace. 2. Contextual Framework 2.1. The Historical Bird of Paradise In the 16th to 19th centuries, birds of paradise were brought to Europe as dried skins without feet, leading to the myth that they were heavenly creatures floating eternally. Valery invokes this colonial misrepresentation to comment on how digital images today are similarly decoupled from their biological origins. 2.2. Post-Internet Aesthetics Valery’s work fits within post-internet art practices (e.g., Petra Cortright, Artie Vierkant) where the screen is not a window but a surface of compression, glitch, and user interface. -ParadiseBirds- 03 mimics the look of a corrupted JPEG mixed with a natural history plate, complete with pseudo-Latin names like Syntaxia erroris magnificus . 3. Analysis of -ParadiseBirds- 03 3.1. Procedural Generation and the Illusion of Infinite Nature The piece uses a StyleGAN3 model trained on 30,000 scanned bird illustrations from the Biodiversity Heritage Library, combined with contemporary anime textures and satellite imagery of deforested regions. Each refresh of the browser generates a new “specimen.” The user can also toggle parameters: “Latent Drift,” “Feather Glitch,” and “Extinction Probability.” As the last parameter increases, the bird’s image fragments into pixel blocks—a commentary on biodiversity loss. 3.2. Interface and Archival Mimicry The UI resembles a digital museum drawer: a dark gray background, a sidebar with flickering metadata, and a “Collector’s Stamp” that timestamps the generation. However, hovering over any part reveals the work’s underlying code, breaking the illusion of authenticity. Valery thus exposes the apparatus of collection as algorithmic curation. 3.3. Sound Design Accompanying the visual is a low-frequency drone mixed with field recordings of actual birds-of-paradise (from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology) that have been pitch-shifted and granulated. The result is an uncanny, mournful call—neither natural nor entirely synthetic—which reinforces the work’s theme of post-natural melancholy. 4. Interpretation: The Paradise Signal Valery’s “03” can be read as a reference to the third of four “paradise signals” in a fictional taxonomy of digital extinction. The work suggests that as real species vanish, their digital surrogates become more abundant, but also more corrupted. The paradise bird, once a symbol of untouched exotic beauty, becomes a glitchy data object—beautiful only in its failure to be real. -ParadiseBirds- Casey Valery 03.