Time Organ

Time Orgon

Since the changes from sunrise to sunset, humans have continuously explored their relationship with time. With technological advancements, people have employed tools to segment time into measurable units, constantly seeking the most precise frequencies in nature for more accurate time calculations. The development of technology has introduced the "attosecond," a time unit with eighteen decimal places. However, even when finely divided, this increasingly precise time is challenging to perceive. In fact, at the moment time is calculated and quantified, the essential nature of "time as continuous change" is already eradicated. Our body's perception of time should be immeasurable, but the quantitative thought patterns ingrained in us by seemingly objective and precise scientific time have gradually led to the loss of our most direct bodily sensations. This has rendered the relationship between time and bodily experience insensate.

In our relentless pursuit of temporal precision, we have unintentionally neglected our own body's inherent rhythm. The Time Organ art project delves into the "insensitivity" of human somatosensory time, seeking to revive the awareness of bodily time through innate human synchronization and sensory extension. Drawing inspiration from the historical "mechanical water clock," an instrument through which humans initially exercised control over time, the Time Organ artwork employs water as a medium and embodies the concept of extending a human organ. The objective is to fashion a tool that reconnects human time perception with the frequency intrinsic to their bodies. Through the orchestrated chaos and synchronous experiences within the artwork, we consistently prompt the question to the experiencer: What is time? What sensations are you experiencing? Our aim is to investigate, through sensory illusions, whether synchronization can facilitate a return to the most direct bodily perception of time.