"This particular installation is meant to leave you in an area of open mental space. The installation is visually inspired by the famous tests of ink spots used in psychology, or alternatively known as the Rorschach test. Psychologists use this test to examine a person’s personality characteristics and emotional functioning. It has been used to detect underlying thinking disorders, especially in cases where patients are reluctant to openly describe their thought processes. The test owes its name to its creator, the Swiss psychologist Hermann Rorschach.
The series of constantly moving images is a representation of how the mind continues to grow and evolve throughout life, adapting to the scenarios they face and the problems they overcome. Each person’s perspective on the same problem may be different, just as they see the work of art, but they all tend to adapt to it (both the work of art and life). If we look at the work of art long enough, we see that it is shaped into multiple forms that decompose and reconstruct, which is a visual analogy with the human being himself since his birth, adapting, overcoming, decomposing, rising, and never stopping. This digital installation is also an analogy with the change we are experiencing as human beings, dynamic to the situations we are going through. This work celebrates the individuality of humans and our changes and unifies all of us metaphorically, despite the obstacles we encounter in our lives, pointing to the one thing we all know to be, humans."