Cornerizer, 2019

We navigate ourselves with vision. We see the physical presence of landscape, objects and people that are in front of us. However, the world behind us becomes an imaginative world at the very moment. You can guess what could be happening, and that might be close to the reality but that is never an absolute truth until you look back at it. Sometimes this uncertainty can inspire excitement but sometimes fear by imagining dangerous people, for example. We are emotionally affected by this never-reachable ‘world behind us’. But what if one has panoramic visions that they can look at the front and the back simultaneously? How will one’s relationship with the surroundings change if there is no such thing as front and back? How does the relationship changes with the people around them? What social situations can we imagine if everyone has a panoramic view? Is there going to be more trust or more suspicion?

These curiosities resulted in the interactive device that throws a question about the relationship between perception and emotion.