It is an interactive installation designed to create tension, pressure, and stress through sound design, encouraging people to take action in response to the situations around them.
This installation directly asks you: in the midst of all this brutality, what are you doing? How do you respond—or do you not respond at all?
Sometimes we are not part of the events; we are merely observers. But we still hear about them, or read about them in the news. In such moments, do you just ignore it and move on? How do you react to events? Do you act as if nothing is happening?
This installation is too powerful to be ignored—it raises an alarm with its sound and imagery. Yet many of us ignore the screams and continue our daily routines as if nothing has happened. Does the fact that nothing has happened to you today mean that nothing will happen tomorrow?
This machine, which tries to communicate a problem directly through its sounds and images, even makes the ground vibrate when you sit around it. And still, as a society, it seems possible for us to remain unresponsive.
The transparent acrylic glass represents inaction despite the visibility of the situation, while the aluminum material embodies the materialized form of the seriousness of the condition.
This project is a personal outcry against the injustices I have witnessed in my country and in the world over the past two years. It was born from guilt — but as I kept thinking about it, the subject grew into something much larger.
Something is always happening, and something always will. Today it is a cry against war. Tomorrow it may be a response to the dehumanization.
But one question will always remain: what are you doing?