Techno Me is a solo art exhibition comprising of an interactive video installation, an interactive digital application, and a series of short video artworks.
At its core, the exhibition poses a deceptively simple question: Who am I? But the twist lies in how this question unfolds in a world saturated with projected images, digital soundscapes, and mediated gestures. Rather than offering answers or taking a definitive stance for or against technology, Techno Me reflects on the evolving relationship between humans and technology, across communication, perception, intimacy, and artistic experimentation. This exhibition took place at Makan House, Amman, Jordan.
[Me/City]
An interactive video installation that reveals the collective impact of technology in urban life. Using a live CCTV feed to track visitor movement in the gallery, the work removes the possibility of passive viewing — implicating each person in the surveillance loop and challenging their sense of agency.
[Me/We]
An interactive computer application that explores self-perception and the projection of identity. Viewers encounter overlapping images of themselves and others, disrupted by audio fragments of mismatched pronouns — feminine/masculine, first/second/third person, singular/plural. The dissonance between what is seen and heard invites a deeper reckoning with the ways we are represented and misrepresented.
Video Art Series
A sequence of short video pieces — me talk, me love, me reflect, me touch, me face, me win, me paint — each focusing on a facet of how technology permeates physical, emotional, and psychological awareness. These works draw attention to the quiet but persistent ways technology shapes daily experience, intimacy, language, and memory.