Location: Budapest, Hungary
Coordinates: 47°24’56.7″N 19°02’24.0″E
Documented: September 2024
Artwork Details: acrylic, wood, medical leech, water, local rocks, with live performance. 20cm x 26.5cm
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This is a Digital Twin project. We ask you to slow down and look, to fight against our collective habit to swipe and scroll.
Artist Statement
A living installation presenting community remedies for mobility collected through the artist’s ongoing project, Social Pharmacy.
About The Artist
Jody Wood is an American artist working in mediums of social practice, video, photography, and performance. Her itinerant public projects address health, care, and poverty. She has received notable awards for her social practice including Fellowship for Socially Engaged Art from A Blade of Grass in NYC, the Rema Hort Mann Foundation Community Arts Grant, and the Fundação Luso-Americana para o Desenvolvimento Grant Award (FLAD) in Portugal. Her work has been supported by residencies at prestigious institutions such as Headlands Center for the Arts, Yaddo, and Skowhegan School for Painting and Sculpture. Her work has been presented in solo exhibitions at Skövde Art Museum and Norrtälje Konsthall in Sweden, Open Source Gallery in Brooklyn, and WhiteBox Gallery front window in NYC, and group exhibitions and screenings at Manchester School of Art, UK; Parrish Museum of Art in Water Mill, NY; and Art Basel Miami Beach. Her work has been featured in publications such as The Atlantic, The Art Newspaper, and The New York Times.

About Digital Twin
Digital Twin is a digital based project aimed at presenting a fresh perspective. It is artwork captured digitally in an original location, showcasing the interplay of light on surfaces, that alters the way art is experienced and opening the viewer up to novel ways of seeing. In this digital environment we ask the viewer to slow down and look, to fight against our collective habit to swipe and scroll.
Digital Twin is a digital based project aimed at presenting a fresh perspective. It is artwork captured digitally in an original location, showcasing the interplay of light on surfaces, that alters the way art is experienced and opening the viewer up to novel ways of seeing. In this digital environment we ask the viewer to slow down and look, to fight against our collective habit to swipe and scroll.