Museum of What We Were
In a not so distant future, humanity will no longer be the subject of history, but its object studied, contemplated, archived.
This speculative project was born from a haunting, poetic question:
What will the intelligences we create see when they look back at us?
The images depict a futuristic museum hall, suspended in a timeless void, cloaked in soft white haze that erases all spatial and temporal coordinates. There are no doors, no windows only a sacred non place, designed for silent observation.
At the center stands a levitating female head, adorned with dramatic makeup and sculptural hair an architectural fusion of fashion and futurism. There is no body. Only a face: a symbol of our obsession with beauty, identity, and representation.
Surrounding her, synthetic bodies stand in stillness. They are not guards; they are witnesses, curators, robotic scholars attempting to decode what we once were.
Dressed in high fashion garments of a future era, they suggest that aesthetics will evolve but will forever continue to question being.
This installation is a posthumous portrait of humanity, a time capsule suspended between art, technology, and memory.
It is not a critique, nor an elegy.
It is a moment of stillness an attempt to immortalize the ephemeral through a gaze that is no longer human.
Comments are closed.