Angel Axioma (b. 1985, Guadalajara, Mexico) is a Texas-based multidisciplinary artist whose work merges art and science to explore interconnection, cultural memory, and the continuum between the natural and the synthetic.
Raised in South Texas, Axioma grew up imagining himself an inventor and scientist. That early curiosity shaped a career that moves fluidly between disciplines: he earned a Master of Studio Arts and later returned to complete a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering at The University of Texas at San Antonio. His practice reflects this cycle of science to art to science and back to art, an identity he describes as “like light - not particle or wave, but both artist and scientist.”
Axioma’s recent permanent commission, Two Live By A Star (2025), inspired by ride-alongs with Travis County EMS and Fire, translates the mission of first responders into a sculptural meditation on service, care, and interdependence.
A Place for Our Thoughts (2019), first commissioned for the City of Austin’s TEMPO program and later acquired by the City of Pflugerville for its Public Library, weaves community silhouettes into a civic archive of shared memory.
His ongoing series Patterns for Life and Ancestral Forms trace connections between ancient symbols, ecological systems, and contemporary design.
Through public art and studio work, Axioma reimagines human stories as lasting forms—bridging the natural and the synthetic, science and art. His works invite viewers to experience the interconnected whole of which we are all part.
Angel Axioma ‘2025