Two essays, one exploring the problems that have sprung from the commodification of art. The other dealing with arts relation to nature. Both trying to use a Marxist and Hegelian lens.
Two essays, one exploring the problems that have sprung from the commodification of art. The other dealing with arts relation to nature. Both trying to use a Marxist and Hegelian lens.
The essay explores how natural and digital “skins” act as responsive surfaces that store memory and shape interaction. Through installations that merge bark, skin and glitching textures, my practice explores slower, attentive forms of touch and the ethical relationships that arise when organic and technological rhythms meet.
This essay explores the interconnectedness of life, death, nature, and pollution, examining how symbiosis in the Anthropocene reflects human impact on the environment.
This essay reflects my research on encountering landscapes, creating an environment for meditative calm and the idea of sublime.
This essay proposes the idea of recycling creative consciousness, combined with the creation of personal environmental art works for analysis.
Myths in digital practice: the art of self-presentation under digitalized society and the possibility of software as a kind of memory of human symbiosis.