Inner Rooms - Transitional Windows
With Inner Rooms, Mégane Likin reflects on her ongoing attempt to grasp the metamorphosis of events. Do her silent landscapes depict a lived moment, etched into memory? Do they evoke a fragile hope or suggest a tangible future? The artist approaches the landscape as a neutral, receptive surface, capable of capturing and reflecting emotional nuances and the evocative details of memory. Each new gaze introduces a shift, suggesting another perspective on what has been and what is yet to come. Likin explores the irreversible nature of each moment, emphasizing the impossibility of reliving an experience. She questions how the present continuously reshapes the past.
The multiplicity and volatility of images become a central concern within this series. In an era marked by an endless stream of fleeting images, the way we absorb and (re)interpret our visual environment is rapidly evolving. Likin confronts how this overabundance influences our perception of the world and our ability to engage with it. The windows offered by digital platforms can both expand our horizons and overwhelm us, raising questions about the transient nature of our relationship to images. To look inward becomes essential — to continue searching.

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