In an era saturated with visual stimuli—where the average person consumes hundreds of thousands of images daily—what happens when an artist deliberately subtracts, fractures, or voids the image itself? O X Imágenes (roughly translating from Spanish as “Or X Images,” or more poetically, “Zero Times Images”) is a disquieting, hypnotic, and profoundly philosophical work that does exactly that. It is not a collection of pictures, but a meditation on the space between pictures. Created by [Artist’s Name — e.g., “the elusive collective Rostro Borrado”], this multimedia installation (running 74 minutes in its film version, or spanning 12 large-scale panels in its gallery iteration) forces us to confront the paradox of representing nothing.
The sound design—credited to [Name], a genius of low-frequency drone and tape hiss—is crucial. Each erasure is accompanied by a corresponding sonic subtraction. As the image loses resolution, the audio loses frequencies. By the final chapter, “X10: O,” the screen is pure 18% gray (a nod to Ansel Adams’s zone system, now a tombstone). The sound is nothing but the room’s own ambient hum and the faint crackle of the projector. You are not watching an image. You are watching the absence of one, and in that absence, you begin to see afterimages burned into your retina—your own internal imágenes . o x imágenes
Fans of Chris Marker’s La Jetée , Ryoji Ikeda’s data sonification, and anyone who has ever felt exhausted by their own camera roll. In an era saturated with visual stimuli—where the
The title is the first clue. The “O” is not a letter but a number—zero. The “X” is the mathematical variable, the unknown, and also the mark of deletion, the kiss of erasure, the crosshair. “Imágenes” (images) are what we expect. Put together: Zero times images . Yet the work is full of images, or rather, full of the memory of images. The work is structured in ten chapters, each corresponding to a hypothetical “X” value. For each, the artist presents a loop: a found photograph, a cinematic still, or a digital render, then proceeds to systematically degrade it through one of ten operations: pixelation, overexposure, cropping to the edge, mirroring, inverting, or, most devastatingly, the “O” operation—complete removal, leaving only a blank, humming white or black square. Created by [Artist’s Name — e
O X Imágenes: A Cartography of Absence, Repetition, and the Ghost in the Visual Machine