Archive Search

  • Mixed-reality installation with live and virtual performers, encountered via the smartphones of the visitors. Real and virtual situations come together, and micro-narratives emerge, based on shifting degrees of presence, traces of daily gestures and
  • The Carousel, 2022 (Materials) | 8 Kodak Carousel S, Paper, Aluminium, Custom Made Electronics. Dimensions: 0.6m x 1.0m x 2.8m The sculpture utilizes eight Kodak Carousel S slide film projectors arranged in a 2x4 grid to produce an analog generative
  • "A culture is dead when its myths have been exposed. Television is exposing the myths of the republic. Television reveals the observed, the observer, the process of observing". — Gene Youngblood Initially, a single image of Nam June Paik,
  • Re-Lighting -
    About 300 km above the Earth (the orbital altitude of the International Space Station), the planet's surface occupies an important place. During the day you can see the continents, at night - the lights of the cities. From further distance, the
  • Cadence -
    Animated film poem created with a constellation of common wayside flowers, gathered during walks on land reclaimed from the sea along the shore of the Laira estuary, on the coast of SW Britain, an endangered habitat now threatened by coastal erosion
  • Anamorph-Lattice, 6 black-white family snapshots repeated 30 times are organized by the Voronoi mathematical model so that the images disrupt the frontal perspective viewing, creating altered perspectives reminiscent of 16th and 17th century
  • Anamorph-Voronoi, is an image-generating software designed to produce aesthetically coherent compositions in 3D volumetric space according to visual rules translated into computer code. Inspired by the historian Jurgis Baltrusaitis’ study of
  • “On the Road”, consists of twelve lenticular panels that explore the cinematic narrative potential of the photographic image in non-electronic form. The exhibition’s title “On The Road” makes reference to the defining work of the Beat Generation’s
  • Refraction
    "Refraction" explores the cinematic narrative of the photographic image in a non-electronic form, the lenticular medium, a process in which two or more images can be seen sequentially simply through the changing of the observer’s viewing
  • The November 1973 issue of Scientific American featured an article titled “The Recognition of Faces” by Bell Labs researcher Leon Harmon that explained how we perceive pixelated digital photographic images. Using a low-resolution, portrait of