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[12]

Still life

Still life

Year 2024

Tags visual art

Year 2024

Tags visual art

'Still Life' is a series of strikingly realistic 3D renders that showcase solitary flowers arranged on a cool, metallic surface. This pairing of organic elements with a stark, industrial backdrop highlights the complex relationship between nature and technology, illustrating a world where natural forms increasingly find themselves embedded in digital spaces. The flowers—delicate, tactile, and alive in appearance—contrast sharply with the sterile steel, creating an intentional tension that echoes the blurring of organic and artificial boundaries in our digital age.

Exhibited at the APEX Zine latest issue launch event in London, 'Still Life' pushes viewers to contemplate the role of technology in reshaping our perceptions of nature and self-identity. By rendering this scene entirely in digital form, the project underscores how digital media can imitate and recontextualize the natural world, leading us to question the authenticity and emotional impact of our interactions with nature in a digitally mediated world. The images ask us to consider: as we move further into virtual realms, what aspects of nature and humanity are we preserving, transforming, or leaving behind?

'Still Life' is a series of strikingly realistic 3D renders that showcase solitary flowers arranged on a cool, metallic surface. This pairing of organic elements with a stark, industrial backdrop highlights the complex relationship between nature and technology, illustrating a world where natural forms increasingly find themselves embedded in digital spaces. The flowers—delicate, tactile, and alive in appearance—contrast sharply with the sterile steel, creating an intentional tension that echoes the blurring of organic and artificial boundaries in our digital age.


Exhibited at the APEX Zine latest issue launch event in London, 'Still Life' pushes viewers to contemplate the role of technology in reshaping our perceptions of nature and self-identity. By rendering this scene entirely in digital form, the project underscores how digital media can imitate and recontextualize the natural world, leading us to question the authenticity and emotional impact of our interactions with nature in a digitally mediated world. The images ask us to consider: as we move further into virtual realms, what aspects of nature and humanity are we preserving, transforming, or leaving behind?