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The Ne(x)st Evolution
Installation
Bioplastic film, LED light, discarded circuit boards, moss, tree twigs, plastic bits
The Ne(x)st Evolution presents a sculptural shelter built from branches entangled with debris—nylon threads, cables, bioplastic fragments—echoing how birds actually weave surrounding materials into their nests, organic or fabricated alike. This pragmatic assemblage questions where the boundary between biological and engineered environments lies, suggesting adaptation is the true constant. Around the installation speakers broadcast the uncanny calls of Australian magpies mimicking R2-D2, the iconic beeping android from Star Wars, a sonic echo of cross-species cultural transmission. The installation amplifies this entanglement of matter and sound, revealing the present as a habitat shaped by hybrid evolution.

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