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Universum
In our Western societies, man has tended to normalize the urban and peri-urban environment, and more broadly his territory, to the point of losing his link with nature and the universe, which form a "whole" (Universum). Are we experiencing a different apprehension of the world - both physical and psychological? An inversion of values? In this context, David Munoz's project questions our position in relation to nature, landscape and the universe. With this in mind, he proposes


"68.392552, 15.082690"
The "68.392552, 15.082690" project invites the spectator to navigate the boundary between physical worlds captured by the camera and virtual worlds fabricated by computers using fractal theory. Built on a model of the physical world, the fractal replicates patterns from the biological environment. Since the end of the Second World War, northern Norway has been the scene of a muted, silent and invisible war between two world superpowers. It is a zone of confrontation between w


Abysses
Faced with the current challenges of pollution and climate change, this photographic series explores the abyssal depths where coral remnants are revealed. Inspired by Tim Ingold's philosophy on the intrinsic fusion of Organism-Environment, the aim is to offer an immersion into a coral cave, where marine geology unfolds in its most tangible reality. This adventure is a meditation on interdependence: in a world where corals succumb to anthropogenic disturbances, David Munoz hig


Hyperobject
To evoke the global warming that affects our environment and our perception of landscape, the principle of the hyperobject, as defined by Timothy Morton in 2013, is taken up in this body of work. The term "hyperobject" refers to things that are astronomically distributed in space and time relative to our human scale. Its name could be used to characterize a nebula, black holes, and the solar system, yet it could also refer to all the nuclear matter on Earth, the plastic in th

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