Hapticity of Being
The Hapticity of Being explores existence as something felt before it is understood. The face emerges not as identity but as surface—granular, burdened, fragmented by color and shadow. Space curves into a tangible corridor where forms hang suspended like sensations waiting to be registered. The path curves forward, inviting movement, not toward meaning but toward contact. Colors here are not symbols; they are pressure, temperature, and resistance to perception. The suspended spheres act as interruptions, reminding us that touch is never continuous, only fragmented. This work suggests that being is not primarily visual or rational, but haptic: known through proximity, texture, and embodied presence. Consciousness becomes a surface landscape where existence is confirmed not by reflection but by the friction between self, space, and the silent matter that shapes it.


