Artwork Explained: Inhuman
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In a world where technology becomes increasingly pervasive, the potential for it to break boundaries is ever-growing.
As it advances at an meteoric pace, it may become a part of our lives in a more vital, symbiotic or parasitic than we can ever imagine.
A dystopian future, where the human imagination meets the our unshakable hunger for improvement and knowledge could breed a unatural bio engineered future transfiguring our human essence and the natural world around us to break boundaries and exceed our potential.
As the landscape we live in constantantly shifts we are forced to check/ question our humanity, our behavioural patterns and our capabilities.
This piece depicts the duality of humans and machine with a human women exposed on one side of her face to be something more unnatural under the surface combined with multiple cultural symbols embedded on the face and mythical properties interlaced with her appearance.
Poised at the intersection of artistry and technology. The humanoid's organic structure is a masterful blend of synthetic sophistication and biological nuance, evoking a sense of living vitality despite its mechanical origins.
The humanoid's posture, both elegant and haunting, captures a moment of serene contemplation, raising questions about identity and the nature of consciousness.
The barbed wire pertruding from gashes on the face symbolising a life of painfful trials and tribulations forcing their way to the surface and the constraints of reconciling with what oneself is.
The interplay of light and shadows on the figure's surface creates a sense of depth and emotion, which makes the piece feel etheral and alive.
As a result provoking a profound reflection on what it means to be human in an age where the boundary between artificial and real is becoming increasingly blurred.
In conclusion, this piece was made to question what we are, what we could be and what we may become as the world and technology around us advances through biological augmentation or other means that we can only imaginein the deepest darkest parts of our minds.