
INCOMPLETE REALLITY
STYLES
Surrealism, Realism, Postmodern, Conceptual, Still Life
ARTIST
ArtCore
BASED IN
Spain

Incomplete Reality is a collection that transforms traditional still life into a contemporary reflection on perception and materiality. Through the fusion of hyperreal fruit and wireframe structures, it questions the boundaries between what is real and what is rendered, between the physical and the digital.
Incomplete Reality invites us to explore the fragile line where the material world meets the virtual. Inspired by classical still life painting, this collection presents fruit with exquisite realism, yet interrupted, fractured, or incomplete. Segments of each form dissolve into geometric wireframes, as if being rendered in real time or deconstructed before our eyes.
This visual tension creates a dialogue between tradition and technology. The familiar language of oil painting collides with the aesthetics of 3D modeling and digital mapping. It challenges the viewer to reconsider what we define as “real,” and whether something incomplete can still be whole.
These are no longer just everyday objects, but forms in flux. One part matter, one part code. One rooted in centuries of artistic tradition, the other born from contemporary digital culture.
Incomplete Reality speaks to a world where nature and simulation coexist, where physical and virtual overlap, and where the concept of reality itself becomes a question.
Incomplete Reality is a collection that transforms traditional still life into a contemporary reflection on perception and materiality. Through the fusion of hyperreal fruit and wireframe structures, it questions the boundaries between what is real and what is rendered, between the physical and the digital.
Incomplete Reality invites us to explore the fragile line where the material world meets the virtual. Inspired by classical still life painting, this collection presents fruit with exquisite realism, yet interrupted, fractured, or incomplete. Segments of each form dissolve into geometric wireframes, as if being rendered in real time or deconstructed before our eyes.
This visual tension creates a dialogue between tradition and technology. The familiar language of oil painting collides with the aesthetics of 3D modeling and digital mapping. It challenges the viewer to reconsider what we define as “real,” and whether something incomplete can still be whole.
These are no longer just everyday objects, but forms in flux. One part matter, one part code. One rooted in centuries of artistic tradition, the other born from contemporary digital culture.
Incomplete Reality speaks to a world where nature and simulation coexist, where physical and virtual overlap, and where the concept of reality itself becomes a question.
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