Co-creation is what happens when visitors stop being passive audience and start shaping the work itself. In our installations, this is the operating mode of the responsive system.
Every visitor is shaping the audio-visual environment around them through their bodily presence, movement or physical interaction. Multiple inputs generate shared multisensory output that everyone in the space shapes together — the result is a living system, not a show.
A sense of belonging comes from making something together. It is a basic human need.
Shared language without words. For nonverbal or non-language-dependent participants, co-creation provides a way of being part of the work that does not require speech. Their way of interacting with the world — their sensory responses, their movement, their presence — is the creative material. When a neurotypical child responds to the same sensory cues, the interaction happens through the art itself. They are creating together in real time, through a shared language that does not require words.
Reciprocity. Underneath co-creation is a reciprocal relationship. The installation responds to the body; the body responds to the installation. Both sides actively shape what happens. Our installations are responsive — they react to presence, movement, touch, and sound. The audience isn’t watching a fixed performance; the installation is in dialogue with them as they’re in it. That’s the reason we call them “immersive.”