Not a Tribute, But a Continuation
An exhibition that continues a conversation we never got to finish
We spoke about this exhibition before he passed away.
At the time, it was just an idea, a shared belief that art deserved more than four walls.
He believed that online exhibitions were not a lesser version of the real thing, but simply a different kind of reality.
“Soon,” he said.
But soon never came.
After his passing, we made a decision together with his family. We would continue, not as a memorial or a tribute, but as a continuation of a conversation we never got to finish.
I joined this project as a UX UI designer and digital curator, shaping not only how the work is seen, but how it is experienced.
I create a space that an audience can move through, even if they cannot physically enter it, designing an experience that extends beyond the limits of a physical gallery.
Online exhibition culture is not a substitute, nor is it a habit born from necessity. It is its own ecosystem, one that breaks down the invisible barriers traditional galleries still carry and allows work to reach people across geographies and time.
An exhibition no longer needs to be limited by location, schedule, or duration. It can exist beyond opening hours, be revisited, shared, and experienced repeatedly.
For artists and their families, this matters, because the work continues to live, new audiences can still encounter it, and conversations can keep unfolding.
This is what it means to support an exhibition in a digital space, not simply to display the work, but to extend its life.
This project reminded me why that ecosystem is worth building. The work does not end when the artist does, and the conversation does not end either.
This conversation continues soon.
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