Cross-digital technics


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sky 3.0


2020 — 2025
Sky 3.0 is a research-based artistic installation that explores the shifting perception of the sky in the context of climate change. Through three vertically mounted digital screens, each displaying vivid fragments of a blue sky, the work creates a serene yet fractured panorama. This immersive visual field invites reflection on the atmosphere not as a static backdrop, but as a dynamic and vulnerable entity. The project draws on climatological data, environmental theory, and perceptual psychology to examine how the sky — once a symbol of permanence and transcendence — has become a witness to ecological disruption. The installation suggests that our experience of the sky is no longer purely aesthetic or poetic; it is increasingly shaped by anxiety, memory, and loss. Philosophically, Sky 3.0 explores the idea that the sky is not merely “out there,” but is intimately connected to our embodied experience. Drawing from phenomenological thought, the work proposes that as the climate shifts, so too does our emotional and existential relationship with the atmosphere. The digital rendering of the sky becomes both a mirror and a mask — reflecting our longing for stability while concealing the accelerating changes above us. In the age of the Anthropocene, where time itself feels compressed and unstable, Sky 3.0 collapses past, present, and future into a single visual gesture. It does not offer solutions or answers; instead, it provides awareness, a poetic act of witnessing. It is a lament for what is vanishing and a call to attend to what remains. Through its quiet intensity, the work asks us to reconsider what it means to live beneath a sky that is no longer silent, no longer eternal, but deeply marked by human presence.