Forming Folds | Zeno van den Broek
With the audiovisual installations, Forming Folds investigates Zeno van den Broek the relationship between the digital realm and our spatial perception.
How strong is the daily reality being influenced by the digital layer of visible and invisible mechanisms? With the audiovisual installations, Forming Folds investigates Zeno van den Broek the relationship between the digital realm and our spatial perception.
Our daily perception is strongly influenced by the digital layer we can expand our perception and knowledge beyond the human into a new form in which space and time seem to be given away.
Zeno van den Broek is a composer and artist who researches the complex relationship between humans and technology. By using audiovisual creations, he researches how our interactions with the fabricated surroundings influence our perception.
The work of Van den Broek challenges…
How strong is the daily reality being influenced by the digital layer of visible and invisible mechanisms? With the audiovisual installations, Forming Folds investigates Zeno van den Broek the relationship between the digital realm and our spatial perception.
Our daily perception is strongly influenced by the digital layer we can expand our perception and knowledge beyond the human into a new form in which space and time seem to be given away.
Zeno van den Broek is a composer and artist who researches the complex relationship between humans and technology. By using audiovisual creations, he researches how our interactions with the fabricated surroundings influence our perception.
The work of Van den Broek challenges the conventional understanding of how we look towards and use spaces filled with technology. By creating intense experiences, he interrupts our habit of consuming the spaces without interactions. He puts us outside our comfort zones and obligates us to actively discover new opportunities.
He intends to generate moments of disruption, friction and potential. Also, it gets us outside our routine with technology. In this way, he invited visitors to actively participate in his art to play an integral role in leaving a permanent impact.