I create digital artworks, and I've spent a considerable amount of time puzzled by what enthralls me about the inherent structures of lines (which become visible when switching to the "view all objects as contours" mode within the program), especially when I craft my own gradient spaces. Concurrently, I'm delving deeply and passionately into the study of quantum mechanics and the theory of relativity, attempting to fathom their essence and why they hold such fascination for me.
According to string theory, the entire fabric of reality consists not of discrete particles, but of infinitely thin entities. These entities undergo vibrations analogous to the movement of strings. An intriguing facet of string theory is that these strings can't exist within just four dimensions. According to this theory, our universe encompasses more dimensions than the familiar four (three spatial dimensions and time). In this context, my goal was to demonstrate that there's a likelihood of comprehending the emergence of beings and the genesis of energy at a quantum level, as I envision it(for example here is a birth of another(our) dimension and here the Entity appears). This could be achieved by establishing a prism (which I'd like to call my own, although I'm merely a chauffeur), positioned precisely between the realm of objects depicted as contours (Fig. 1) and the domain of gradient spaces (Fig. 2). This positioning would lead to a novel realm (on the horizon of events, where you're the observer). I humorously dubbed this concept "quantum entanglement." It's a playful term suggesting that any state of the tiniest energies - quanta - implies symmetry in nuclear interactions. Essentially, if one state changes, the connected state changes too, assuming its charge. While this wordplay doesn't encapsulate my present discovery, it remains my psychological credo.
Fig. 1
                             (5 Fundamental Type 1 String Interactions)
What about string theory? With that, the strings have two forms: closed and open. The latter can freely join the ends of another string and form a new one. Closed strings help physicists describe gravity in quantum mechanics.
Fig. 2
This is ↓ my work of 2020! Same colors and shapes ↑, amazing! *.*
"Eva bitting the apple"
(with this name I wanted to say that this is the very starting point of humanity at the quantum level)​​​​​​​
Today is August 29, 2023, everything came together for me. Let this "artistic statement" look like a note, for me this is a really important event that brings everything together, creating a "theory of everything" of my personal experience in art. Ksenia Kantor
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