How do you perceive what is real? How do you recognize when something is not what it seems in a world where more and more things attempt to deceive your senses and convince you of their authenticity?
At first it may seem absurd to imagine a world where the authenticity and originality of everything must be marked and verified—yet we are gradually moving closer to such a reality.
Within the masked realities that permeate our everyday lives, our connection to ourselves and to our environment slowly begins to fracture. Cracks appear in the worlds we construct around us—much like when a computer-generated digital model suddenly reveals an unexpected error, a “glitch,” forcing us to look twice to understand what we are actually seeing.
Increasingly, we no longer engage with reality itself but with its copies: images and phenomena that are traces of a world that may no longer exist. Everything points to something else, which in turn points to yet another reference.
In this project, I search for these strange points of failure—those moments when the familiar order falters. These sobering cracks offer an opportunity to question how strongly we are still connected to our own human reality, and to what extent we inhabit a world constructed either by ourselves or by others.