Executed Poetry is a device that executes poetic code and displays its ephemeral traces.
When you press the button, short poems written in Python are executed within a microcontroller. The e-paper display shows the executed poem alongside execution count, processing time, and the microcontroller's unique public key and signature. These serve as proof that the poem was indeed executed on that specific machine.
The collected poems explore philosophical themes such as “existence,” “eternity,” and “nothingness” using Python’s primitive functions. Poems that instantly terminate infinite loops, define and delete non-existent classes, return themselves while negating their own existence. Lines of code oscillate at the boundary between computation and philosophy.
This work presents a new relationship between computers and poetry. Poetry is no longer something to be read, but something to be executed. What we witness are the traces of execution—epitaphs of poems carved by the machine.
Executed Poetry
荒川零一 / Zeroichi Arakawa・2025
Artworks




Count the mornings. One for each window. Until light is born.
| Material | Acrylic case, Wood panel, Electronic paper display, Raspberry Pi Pico, Push button |
| Size | 177 x 245 x ~50 mm |
| Delivery | Shipped by NEORT (costs covered by NEORT for domestic deliveries) |
| Notes | The e-paper display retains its image even when powered off; power is required only during execution. |
Price
¥100,000

Make a box for remembering you. Each time you look inside, I become you.
| Material | Acrylic case, Wood panel, Electronic paper display, Raspberry Pi Pico, Push button |
| Size | 177 x 245 x ~50 mm |
| Delivery | Shipped by NEORT (costs covered by NEORT for domestic deliveries) |
| Notes | The e-paper display retains its image even when powered off; power is required only during execution. |
Price
¥100,000

Touch eternity, and immediately let go.
| Material | Acrylic case, Wood panel, Electronic paper display, Raspberry Pi Pico, Push button |
| Size | 177 x 245 x ~50 mm |
| Delivery | Shipped by NEORT (costs covered by NEORT for domestic deliveries) |
| Notes | The e-paper display retains its image even when powered off; power is required only during execution. |
Price
Sold Out, Thank You!!

Draw the outline of "nothing". Do not try to fill it.
| Material | Acrylic case, Wood panel, Electronic paper display, Raspberry Pi Pico, Push button |
| Size | 177 x 245 x ~50 mm |
| Delivery | Shipped by NEORT (costs covered by NEORT for domestic deliveries) |
| Notes | The e-paper display retains its image even when powered off; power is required only during execution. |
Price
¥100,000

Whisper to a mirror that you are not there. Until it fogs over.
| Material | Acrylic case, Wood panel, Electronic paper display, Raspberry Pi Pico, Push button |
| Size | 177 x 245 x ~50 mm |
| Delivery | Shipped by NEORT (costs covered by NEORT for domestic deliveries) |
| Notes | The e-paper display retains its image even when powered off; power is required only during execution. |
Price
¥100,000

If your heart is empty, borrow love from the universe.
| Material | Acrylic case, Wood panel, Electronic paper display, Raspberry Pi Pico, Push button |
| Size | 177 x 245 x ~50 mm |
| Delivery | Shipped by NEORT (costs covered by NEORT for domestic deliveries) |
| Notes | The e-paper display retains its image even when powered off; power is required only during execution. |
Price
Sold Out, Thank You!!
Get the piece
If you are interested in purchasing artwork, please contact us using this form.

荒川零一 / Zeroichi Arakawa
Code Poet, Smart Contract Engineer.
Finding literary and structural beauty in program code, Zeroichi continues to explore and experiment with the values that emerge from code as a medium. Representative works include 《DeepSea》, which explores internal states through testing frameworks, and 《inside window》, which excavates poetic spaces hidden within the browser runtime environment. These works present both the importance of reading code itself and the poetic experiences generated through its execution. Currently pursuing a PhD at the Institute of Advanced Media Arts and Sciences (IAMAS).
