BLUEROOM
At the Netherlands Fotomuseum 2026
The artwork is not a solitary act but a shared space of becoming, a gateway to redesigned worlds where perspectives are constantly shifting.
Unlike the fixed cyanotypes in this exhibition, his work comes alive through the presence and actions of others. In the BLUEROOM, you are not merely an observer but an active participant.
Your shadow is captured as a living imprint, echoing the cyanotype process in digital form. Each encounter reshapes the work, dissolving the boundaries between artist, artwork and audience.
Bliss
At Stedelijk Museum Schiedam
“Bliss” a journey through ever-changing digital landscapes, immersing you in a vivid dreamworld that mirrors life itself. This project pays homage to the elusive ‘flow state’—that rare moment of creative immersion where time appears to halt.
Picture a realm where this fleeting ‘flow’ extends infinitely, where the creative spark knows no boundaries. “Bliss” represents this limitless expanse, a digital utopia where every moment feels eternal.
Bliss
At DADA Marrakech
“Bliss” a journey through ever-changing digital landscapes, immersing you in a vivid dreamworld that mirrors life itself. This project pays homage to the elusive ‘flow state’—that rare moment of creative immersion where time appears to halt.
Picture a realm where this fleeting ‘flow’ extends infinitely, where the creative spark knows no boundaries. “Bliss” represents this limitless expanse, a digital utopia where every moment feels eternal.
Bliss
At DIG Shibuya Crossing Tokyo
“Bliss” a journey through ever-changing digital landscapes, immersing you in a vivid dreamworld that mirrors life itself. This project pays homage to the elusive ‘flow state’—that rare moment of creative immersion where time appears to halt.
Picture a realm where this fleeting ‘flow’ extends infinitely, where the creative spark knows no boundaries. “Bliss” represents this limitless expanse, a digital utopia where every moment feels eternal.
LOOPS
At Bab Rouah Rabat
The work asks a quiet, uncomfortable question. If life is this repetition, this set of routines we mistake for choice, then what separates the person from the program? The figures carry their own memories, their reasons, their backstories. But from the outside, at this distance, against this wall, none of it shows. What shows is the loop.
Three minutes long, it feels like a lifetime, because a lifetime, watched from far enough away, might look exactly like this.