FATIMA TRAVASSOS
Cluster Contemporary Jewellery Exhibitor | AI Exhibitor | December 2024
Travassos has showcased her work on a global stage, participating in Maison Meta’s inaugural AI Fashion Show Week in New York and exhibiting at prestigious events such as the PhotoVogue Festival in Milan, New Fashion Future Technology in Cannes and Tokyo, and Rakuten Fashion Week in Japan. Her short AI films have been displayed at NOX Gallery, the National Art Center, and Content Tokyo. Most recently, she exhibited at Digital Fashion Week in both New York and London and is currently featured by Nick Knight on SHOWstudio.
Fatima Travassos is a former fashion stylist, menswear buyer, and communication designer who has transitioned into a digital creator. Her work has been featured in numerous international digital art magazines, including a recent print piece in CreAtIva Magazine in Spain. By day, she manages the e-commerce and content for Canada’s leading authority on 17th to 19th-century fine artworks. By night, she crafts AI-driven creations, with a particular focus on the fashion realm.
Travassos’ work is founded on the belief that fashion is not merely a reflection of culture but also a medium for imagining our collective future. By combining traditional design principles with cutting-edge artificial intelligence, she seeks to redefine the boundaries of wearable art, offering a vision of the surreal possibilities inherent in digital craftsmanship.
Drawing on her background as a fashion stylist and menswear buyer, she infuses each creation with a profound understanding of texture, form, and narrative. Her process is both collaborative and experimental—an evolving dialogue between human intuition and machine precision. Every piece tells a story, reinterpreting the role of garments and accessories as channels for self-expression in both physical and virtual realms.
She is particularly inspired by the intersection of sustainability and technology, embracing AI as a tool to reduce waste while broadening creative possibilities. Nostalgic influences often permeate her work, evoking a sense of deeply human memory while simultaneously pointing towards a futuristic aesthetic.