Our trust in the world is based on the cognition that shapes perception through sensors; "seeing" gives us the broadest awareness of the outside world. To interact with the world, we often rely on our eyes more than any other sensor.
As our daily lives become increasingly interconnected with various technologies, the structure of the brain and eyes receives new coordinates from the surrounding world. With the increasing possibility of losing the natural ability to see, the real picture of the world will be defined with other characteristics, and naturally, communication and survival will bring new challenges.
The difference in seeing the world (through the eyes) alongside individual thoughts and interpretations of the world further questions the concept of certainty and creates an ever-present doubt in our perception of the world. Can we now say that our image of the world is common and real? Or do we only receive a represented image of the world based on the conditions and capabilities of our sensors?
The "Intersee" project (from the "Kamera" collection) focuses on visual disturbances and deviations that have a significant impact on the quality of vision and cause changes and distortions in the human image of the world.
By emphasizing individual differences in worldview, preserving personal technique, and drawing inspiration from the effects of these disorders, the result of the collection is a representation of each artist's imagination in terms of receiving and understanding a different and incomplete image of the world.