In Temporary view (2021) digital graphic series I investigate how contemporary visual formats—rooted in mobile media and screen technologies—shape perception, framing, and attention. I was inspired by the everyday experience of dynamic aspect ratios, adaptive interfaces, and platform-native layouts that subtly influence how we see and interpret the world.

In our culture of constant input, visuals are created to be fast, flexible, and ephemeral. In Temporary view I reflect on this condition: images that exist not to last, but to align with algorithmic rhythms, screen proportions, and user habits. In the series I explore how these visual constraints become aesthetic systems, conditioning not only what we look at, but how we look.

Aesthetically, I draw on conceptual and digital abstraction, working with minimalist composition and geometric reduction.