Accidental Landscapes by Mohammad Noureddini
Accidental Landscapes is a digital painting series created by artist Mohammad Noureddini reflect on the hidden aesthetics of discarded matter. Everyday waste, scaffolding, plastic sheets, and heaps of rubbish are reinterpreted through painterly form, becoming a stage for light, rhythm, and unexpected beauty.



The works investigate the tension between ecological collapse and visual composition. By reframing debris and abandoned structures as subjects of painting, the series questions where the boundary lies between beauty and ugliness, attraction and unease. While the paintings may appear visually striking, they remain rooted in discarded matter. The tension lies in their duality, what might momentarily look beautiful is, in the end, still waste, a reminder of our culture’s excess and neglect.
Rather than portraying rubbish as detritus, the series treats it as an involuntary archive of culture: its patterns, its accumulation, its forgotten weight. Each composition balances aesthetic pleasure with confrontation, drawing the viewer in with painterly colour and form while refusing to let the subject escape its environmental resonance.
Ultimately, Accidental Landscapes is an inquiry into perception. It asks: What hidden narratives exist within discarded things? How do these overlooked forms shape our cities, our memories, and our sense of responsibility?
Merging a background in fine art with digital media, the series hovers between realism and abstraction. The result is a body of work that creates dialogue between beauty and discomfort, reminding us of the fragile line between visual delight and ecological consequence.