We Were Always Holding Ourselves Through Glass I wanted to freeze the instant the tool became a limb and the limb became an interface. I chose three suspended shards—face, hand, and phone—entangled by
**The Reflex Was Always Mechanical, The Limb Always Digital** I wanted to stage the instant recognition that our devices are not held but inhabited—so I split face, hand, and phone into separate shard
We Were Always Holding Our Second Nervous System I wanted to show the instant the body realizes the device is not outside it. I split a face shard, a hand lattice, and a black-glass slab into separate
The Limb We Mistook for a Tool I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone were never separate—so I split them apart and bound them with paradox prisms that refract impossible space in war
We Were Limbs Before We Knew It I wanted to fix the instant when face, hand, and device stop being separate actors and reveal themselves as one reflex. I split them into suspended shards and braided t
The Phone Was Always Part Of Your Hand I wanted to show that body, device, and behavior were never separate—only split into shards we mistook for distance. I chose a high‑key bone field where a face s
We Were Always More Than One Body I wanted to stage the instant the limb-tool illusion collapses: face, hand, and phone separated in space but fused by impossible refraction. I chose bone-white negati
Boundaries Shatter Into Familiar, Wordless Machinery I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone were never separate—fractured apart only so their entanglement could become visible. I chos
We Never Picked Up The Phone, We Grew It I wanted to show the instant you realize the device was never external — the face, the hand, and the slab are one reflex split by light. I chose hyper-cold par
**Your Tool Was Always a Nerve** I wanted to show the instant the body recognizes the device as itself, splitting face, hand, and phone into separate shards yet binding them with impossible prisms tha
We Already Grew the Extra Limb I wanted to catch the instant we recognize the phone as part of the body, not in the future but in the fracture we carry now. I chose three suspended shards—face, hand,
The Limb We Mistook For A Tool I wanted to fracture the portrait at the moment the device stops being held and starts being us. I chose paradox prisms to entangle a face shard, a hand shard, and a pho
We Were Always Holding Part of Ourselves I wanted the viewer to feel the instant a limb realizes it is also an interface. I split face, hand, and phone into separate, floating shards and entangled the
The Phone Was Always A Nerve, Not A Tool I wanted to show that body, device, and behavior are already one reflex, so I split a face, a hand, and a phone into separate shards and then bound them with p
**We Were Limbs Before We Noticed** I wanted to show the instant the face, the hand, and the phone realize they are the same organ — split apart in space but fused by a colder, sharper physics. I chos
Your Thumb Was Always Part Of The Circuit I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone were never separate species—only shards of one reflex split for inspection. I separated them in bone-w
We Erased the Border Without Noticing I wanted to freeze the instant where skin, device, and thought admit they’ve been the same circuit all along. I split face, hand, and phone into suspended shards
**We Were Limbs Before We Knew We Reached** I wanted to show the instant the tool stopped being external—how face, hand, and device fracture apart yet act as one reflex. I chose razor-edged paradox pr
We Were Never Minus, Only Misnamed I wanted to freeze the instant when flesh, device, and reflex admit they’ve already merged. I split a face, a hand, and a phone into bone-white shards and entangled
The Limb We Mistook For A Tool I wanted to show that the device, the body, and the algorithm are already one organism, split only by habit. I fractured a face, a hand, and a phone into bone‑white spac
The Limb We Mistook For A Tool I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone were never separate bodies but already one system — split apart only to reveal their entanglement. I chose a bone
The Limb We Mistook For A Tool I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone are already one organism—split only by habit—so I fractured them into separate shards and then entangled them wit
We Were Never Minus To Begin With I wanted to show the split second we realize the device was not in our hand but inside our reflex — a limb we forgot to name. I fractured face, hand, and phone into b
The Phone Was a Limb All Along I wanted to show that body, device, and habit aren’t separate objects but one nervous system already fused. I split a face, a hand, and a phone into suspended shards and
Entanglement Portrait: The Limb We Mistook For Tool I wanted to stage the instant we realize the device is not held by us but continuous with us. I split face, hand, and phone into bone-white shards a
We Mistook a Limb for a Tool I wanted to freeze the instant the boundary vanished and show that the face, the hand, and the phone were always one reflex, split only by habit. I chose razor-edged parad
**We Were Limb Before We Were Tool** I wanted to show the instant you realize the device was never separate: the face, the hand, and the phone already pieces of one reflex. I chose bone-white space sp
MERGING LIMBS: THE CYBORG EXISTENCE REVEALED I wanted to express how deeply we are already intertwined with technology, blurring the lines between body and device until they dissolve completely. I c
We Were Limbs Before We Knew It I wanted to show the instant you realize the device never left your body—it simply surfaced. I split the face, hand, and phone into separate shards and entangled them w
The Limb That Pretended To Be A Tool I wanted to catch the instant a hand, a face, and a phone reveal they were one body all along. I fractured them into separate shards and bound them with paradox pr
The Phone Was The Hand All Along I fractured the portrait into a face shard, a hand shard, and a phone shard, then entangled them with paradox prisms so their edges act like shared nerves. I chose rus
We Were Always Holding Our Own Nerves I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone were never separate parts, only briefly misaligned reflections of a single body. I split them into floatin
WE WERE NEVER MINUS, ONLY DISTRIBUTED I wanted to show the instant we recognize the device as anatomy and the reflex as architecture. I fractured face, hand, and phone into separate shards and entangl
We Were Never Minus, Only Misnamed I wanted to split the self into tool, limb, and thought, then braid them back together with a crystal that refuses to pick a side. I chose bone-white space and ruste
The Phone Was Your Nerve All Along I wanted to show that the limb, the tool, and the thought have already fused, so I split the portrait into face, hand, and phone—suspended yet inseparable—then bound
Boundaries Shatter; Reflex Reveals Itself as Limb I wanted to fix the instant a face, a hand, and a phone stop being separate and become one reflex. I split them into floating shards and entangled the
The Tool Was Always a Nervous System I wanted to show that limb, interface, and device were never separate—so I split a face, a hand, and a phone into floating shards and then entangled them with a co
Your Phone Was Always Your Phantom Limb I wanted to freeze the instant we realize the split between face, hand, and device was an illusion. I separated them into bone-white shards and then bound them
**Your Phone Was Always Your Phantom Hand** I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone were never separate—only seen through different cuts of the same crystal. I split the portrait into
Paradox Prism Makes Our Hidden Limb Visible I wanted to show the instant we realize the phone was never in our hand — it was our hand. I split face, hand, and device into separate shards and bound the
Already-Cyborg: The Limb You Mistook For Tool I wanted to show the instant you realize the device is not separate — your face, your hand, and your phone are split apart yet remain one reflex. I chose
The Limb You Mistook For A Tool I wanted to show that the phone, the hand, and the face were never separate parts—but one organism already entangled. I split them into cold, floating shards and bound
**The Phone Was Always Part of the Body** I wanted to show the instant you realize the device is not held but inhabited: face, hand, and phone fracture apart yet act as one organism through cold, razo
**The Phone Was Always a Nerve** I fractured a portrait into face, hand, and device, then lashed them together with paradox prisms so the light itself behaves like a shared reflex. I chose bone-white
**The Phone Was Always Part of You** I wanted to show the instant you realize the device never sat in your hand — it grew there. I split face, hand, and slab into separate shards and entangled them wi
We Were Never Separate, Only Split Across Light I wanted to show that the face, the hand, and the phone are not companions but facets of the same limb — already entangled before we learned the word. I