It was almost night by the beach
It is common to speak about the impact of current technological developments on health, labor, transportation, or education. However, it may be equally necessary to ask how these transformations affect our intimacy: the ways in which we perceive ourselves, how we relate to others, and how we inhabit and experience our surroundings.
As our everyday experiences are shaped by constantly evolving technological tools, this series seeks to outline a passage in which the digital is not presented as a promise of the future. Instead, the work proposes a performative and relational space, where presence is not defined by action or productivity. The images pose a set of questions: where does the intimate or emotionally truthful reside? At what point is the line drawn between artifice and reality? In this oscillation an affective space opens up that cannot be reduced to either document or simulation.
It was almost night by the beach began to take shape in 2024 from images generated in 3D. Since then, the project has continued to expand and transform. In its current stage, the work is produced entirely through artificial intelligence tools.




















