The World

Twysted Genius was built in a time when I did not fully know who I was. What I did know was how to move. Dance became the first place I could access something real, something honest, something that didn’t need to be explained. In that space, I found flow.

Flow became more than movement. It became a way of understanding myself without forcing answers. Instead of trying to control everything, I started listening to what was already there. My subconscious, my instincts, my emotions. The things that don’t always make sense at first, but feel true.

From there, everything expanded.

I began mapping that same sense of flow into visual art, letting pieces form naturally instead of overthinking them. Those works then became wearable, turning into print on demand designs that carry the same energy into everyday life. What started as movement became something you can see, something you can wear, something you can step into.

Twysted Genius exists as a world of magical authenticity. A space where creation is led by trust, not perfection. Where art, clothing, performance, and production all come from the same place. Not forced, not fabricated, but felt.

This is a space where only true flow exists.

Meet the Artist

Madeline Anderson is a New York based abstract artist and dancer whose work is rooted in flow, emotion, and subconscious exploration. With a background in dance and psychology, she approaches creation as both a physical and internal process.

Her work began with movement, using dance as a way to access emotion and identity during a time of uncertainty. Over time, that process evolved into visual art, where she maps her subconscious through abstract forms and intuitive creation. Each piece reflects a moment of trust in the unknown, allowing something deeper to come through.

Through Twysted Genius, Madeline brings that process into multiple forms, including wearable art, performance, and creative production. Her work is not confined to one medium, but moves freely between them, always guided by the same principle of flow.

What she creates is an invitation to trust your own process, to listen more closely, and to find authenticity in the spaces that cannot be forced.

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