Cross - digital techniques & Variable sizes
2017—2018
The HOLOGRAPHIC VISION series offers a reflection on the relativity of the image, its limits, and its presence. Presented in the form of a seizure of reality, the perception is situated between dual presence/absence, reality, and illusion. Seen in an indefinable, elusive, and almost immaterial way, this image invites a subtle understanding of the reality and multiple configurations of its hidden dimensions. Based on the fragility of the gaze that often characterizes our current view of the world, this series is digitally designed from images found randomly on the Internet. This work, in its visible and invisible complexity, situates itself between the materialization and dematerialization of the image, inciting a reflection on our relations to the real. Drawing on the fragility of the gaze that often characterizes our current vision of the world, this series is digitally created from images randomly found on the Internet. These compositions evoke a kind of spectral truth — suspended in a state of incompleteness, vibrating at the edge of comprehension.
The use of found images carries within it the dissonance of digital detritus, mirroring the constant flux of visual culture. In this context, the viewer is both witness and participant in an interpretive dance between what is seen and what is sensed. The holographic treatment of perception does not resolve the tension, but rather accentuates the instability of meaning, asking us to reconsider how images function in the space between memory and projection. As the works unfold, they speak to a world saturated with fleeting signals and unresolved stories, where each image is a portal — not to certainty, but to multiplicity. Through its ephemeral visual language and dislocated sources, the series confronts the paradox of seeing: how the act of looking can simultaneously reveal and obscure. In doing so, HOLOGRAPHIC VISION becomes not only a meditation on image and perception, but a contemporary ritual of decoding reality in a digital age — an exploration of our yearning to grasp the intangible.
More of the works from this series exist. If you are interested to learn more, please reach out here.
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