Each Limb Has Its Own Time - 2025
A humanoid structure that functions both as a physical support and as a subtle reference to the human figure. It stands as a presence rather than a literal body, a framework that suggests anatomy without fully embodying it. On specific areas of the structure, small screens are mounted, each displaying video fragments corresponding to those particular parts of the body, such as a hand, a leg, or an elbow, filmed in slow, almost suspended motion.
Each fragment of skin moves, touches, flexes, or performs minimal gestures. These are not dramatic actions, but intimate, almost involuntary movements: a finger grazing a surface, a knee slightly bending, an elbow shifting weight.
Together, these dispersed images create a body that is both assembled and fragmented, unified by structure yet temporally and spatially disjointed. The work reveals how each part of the body carries its own rhythm, its own micro-life, suggesting that what we call “the body” is in fact a constellation of autonomous movements, loosely held together in a temporary whole.





