Wishflower

Wishflower

Magic, intention, translation of desire into light

Wishflower is an obedient piece of magic disguised as an installation. It behaves like a wishing well that has traded banality of coins for human contact: instead of throwing something away, you offer a moment of yourself. Three hexagonal “petals” hang above you, glowing like a strange geometric flower against the dark, waiting for a wish to bloom in them.

The ritual is simple. You place your hand on the skull's forehead at the altar, close your eyes and think of something you want with the kind of honesty you don’t usually say out loud. The sculpture listens to the tiny shifts in your body – changes in warmth, moisture, skin current – and treats them as the physical echo of that wish. Inside the skull a soft vibration starts, a low purr that grows stronger as the system “thinks”, giving the sense that the object is weighing your intention.

When the reading is done, the flower answers. The hexagons above you flare into motion, washing through different colours and rhythms as if they were replaying the mood of your wish in light rather than words. _Wishflower_ doesn’t promise to grant anything. Instead, it gives your private desire a visible form for a moment – a brief translation of inner weather into colour, before the petals settle back into their quiet glow and wait for the touch.

Effect

Visualizes wish as color and motion

Gallery