
A reflection of movement, perception, and knowledge.
Dynamic Uncertainties is originally conceived as an Augmented Reality installation that poses a reflexion on the role of digital media as the main catalyst within the current processes of production, dissemination and acquisition of knowledge.
The installation uses Augmented Reality not simply as a technological medium, but as a conceptual device. By superimposing digital layers onto physical space, the work exposes the instability of perception itself, where information is continuously rewritten, updated, and reframed in real time. Reality becomes something negotiated between the physical and the virtual.
01
Heisenberg’s Uncertainty
According to Heisenberg’s Principle of Uncertainty, it is impossible to simultaneously determine both the exact position and velocity of a particle.
The more precisely one is measured, the more indeterminate the other becomes.
02
The paradox
Drawing from this principle, the project proposes a contemporary paradox: the deeper we investigate or attempt to define something, the further it drifts from its actual condition in time.
Dynamic Uncertainties invites viewers to navigate ambiguity. It questions the reliability of systems that increasingly mediate our understanding of the world, revealing how immediacy, speed, and constant connectivity reshape collective memory and the construction of truth.








