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Data  Landscapes  &  the  Body  Silos

Data Landscapes + the Body Silos - artist’s statement
This hybrid concept suggests that bodies, like landscapes, can be mapped, aestheticized, controlled, and interpreted through the lens of data, reflecting how the digital realm can reshape our perception of both the physical and natural world. But what is left to the human and the natural element after all?
In this perspective, the human body is not merely a biological entity but a topography that
can be analyzed, visualized, and manipulated digitally.
This reimagines the body as an interactive, data-driven (interval and external, e.g. influences on one’s appearance)landscape where skin flesh and spirit become data aestheticization*, blending organic elements with digital ideals of beauty and perfection.
* verb (used with object) , aes·thet·i·cized, aes·thet·i·ciz·ing. to depict as being pleasing
or artistically beautiful; represent in an idealized or refined manner
The artworks of this series juxtapose the landscape with the body, the flesh with the digital texture, the analog with the digital references and semantics in an interplay of nature and the body, suggesting the digital space as an extension of the physical body, provocing reflection on how technology transforms our physicality into something more abstract,
challenging the perception of identity and subjectivity.
Digitally generated art often involves creating, manipulating and rendering landscapes that reflect our current environmental anxieties or desires, turning natural terrains into coded spaces that respond to human impact. This conceptual framework links the organic to the synthetic, showing how the environment becomes another body to be observed dissected,
aestheticized, and digitized; another “case” that we seek to improve to intervene to wish upon, like our own bodies and our desire for maintainance, improvement or even self- perfection.
The idea of overlapping realities speaks of the intersection of the physical body with digital data, where the way of seeing challenges and brings anew the
relationship to both our own bodies and the world around us. This could involve visual projections where the boundary between one’s body and the surrounding environment is dissolved, showing them as interconnected and part of a larger digital ecosystem.
On the one hand, Body-Environment hybrids bring art that fuses bodily forms with natural landscapes, suggesting a harmonious transition between human anatomy and geographical
features.
On the other hand, the composition and the manipulation of digital landscapes created based on
-and inspired by the fluid nature of landscapes, allows them to become sites of data, subject to aesthetic resolution; manipulation and digital reinterpretation and visualization.
Surrealistic, as surrealism blurs these boundaries, turning traditional landscapes into
distorted, dreamlike visions that evoke memory rather than reality. Surreal of mimicking- imitating.
Mimicking the images of the past, i.e. of the natural landscapes, redefining landscaspes as
on-screen dreamscopes. Compositions where elements of digital aesthetics—pixelated forms, glitch elements, or fluid motion effects are trying to express the emerging field of vision,
by mimicking – being alike or being nostalgic about the classic landscape.
Overall, this approach creates a layered narrative where both the body and the landscape are subject to deeper reflection and free play, raising questions about what is 'real' or 'natural' in the digital world as well as about the mergence or the confusion that we experience as physical and now digital subsistances (υπόσταση).

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