Description
The work presents itself as a visual explosion in which the language of the technical object is dismantled and reassembled with an emotional twist. The central figure, reminiscent of a control device or an industrial mechanism, is immersed in a vibrant, almost aggressive, color field of vertical streaks and acidic contrasts. The color do not describe, but disturbs:it invades the form, alters it, and renders it unstable. The composition oscillates between recognizability and abstraction. The contours are sharp, almost electrified, while the background seems to dissolve in a shower of chromatic data. The overall effect is one of constant tension: between function and chaos, between control and loss of control. The work captures the gaze like a warning signal, forcing the viewer to question the relationship between humanity, technology, and decision-making.
Conceptual notes
For the author, Trigger Point represents the exact moment when a choice becomes irreversible. The device depicted is not a real machine, but a metaphor, the mental space where an invisible button is pressed, where intention and action coincide. The saturated, unstable colors express the emotional complexity that accompanies every decision-making act, while the central structure symbolizes the human need to give shape and control to what, by its very nature, remains unpredictable. The work thus becomes a visual reflection on the power of choice, a minimal, seemingly technical gesture, yet capable of generating profound and lasting consequences