"How To Preserve A Body” involves the projection of disembodied human body parts inside a refrigerator, creating a surreal juxtaposition of the organic and the domestic.
By transforming an ordinary household appliance into an unsettling repository of fragmented anatomy, the installation questions our relationships with consumption, preservation, and the boundaries of the body.
Media: Projection Mapping, Photography
Category: art installation
"Solo Pong" is a performance-based installation that redefines the traditional
dynamics of a two-party sporting event through programming, presenting a fully automated and predictable gameplay experience.
“Solo Pong” serves as a metaphor for the encroachment of technology into our daily lives, and challenges audiences to consider the delicate balance between technological advancement and the irreplaceable aspects of human connection.
Media: 3D print, arduino nano 33 IoT, ToF sensor, stepper motor, arcrylic, wood
Category: art performance, installation, physical computing,
post-pandemic social discussion
Humans play an infinitesimally small role in the vast universe, yet
our minds are so powerful that they can take us anywhere.
Despite our tininess, our existence is substantial, just like pixels in
a digital image.
“Parts of a Whole” is a series of coding exercise that leverages the similarity between computational pixels and individuality to expamine the relationship between the universe and our own selves.