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10:26, 09 November 2025
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In Russia, Digital Artists Sync Time Itself

At St. Petersburg’s “Tsifergaus” gallery, holograms, bioart, AI, and mechanical installations explore what it means to feel time.

A new exhibition titled “Synchronization” has opened at the Tsifergaus Digital Art Gallery in St. Petersburg, showcasing the six winning projects from Russia’s 2024 Media Art Competition. The show blends cutting-edge technology with contemporary art, featuring AI-driven works, holograms, bioart, and kinetic installations — all united by one theme: time.

“The exhibition invites not just reflection on time, but synchronization with it — to feel it within your body and perception,” said Christina Ots, curator of the competition and the exhibition. “Time becomes tangible — in motion, in light, in sound, in waiting, in interaction. Each work sets its own rhythm, inviting visitors to tune in to a different frequency.”

From Living Fungi to “Hacked” Clocks

Among the standout pieces is “Slime Mold” by Maria Kuptsova, a living organism that grows as it absorbs nutrient-infused water. The fungus sends biological impulses that are translated into sound and color, turning growth itself into a performance.

Another project, “Hacked Clocks” by Victor Kertanov, animates an everyday object — a household clock — giving it agency to “speak” through movement and sound.

According to the organizers, this year’s competition marks a turning point: digital art has moved beyond the screen, becoming a physical, sensory experience where technology and nature merge — and where time, for once, can be felt.

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