My artistic practice centers on the subtle yet complex relationship between the contemporary human body and technology-driven life. As technology emerges to meet human needs, it simultaneously reshapes our sensory habits, bodily behaviors, and spatial awareness. In my work, I aim to examine the constantly shifting boundaries between the physical and the digital, the organic and the synthetic, the individual and the system.
Much of my recent work investigates the tension between presence and distance, control and surrender. For example, by re-contextualizing familiar objects or routines—such as workout apps, navigation tools, or surveillance interfaces—I seek to reflect on the strange intimacy that forms between bodies and technologies in our digital age. The sense of estrangement, latency, or repetition becomes a material to work with, offering viewers a chance to critically examine their own interactions with media and machines.
Ultimately, my practice is a process of tracing how bodies absorb, resist, and adapt to the flows of contemporary technological life. It is a search for where—and how—we still encounter vulnerability, intimacy, and friction within increasingly optimized and disembodied systems.