transmoderna
artist aggregate & studio
ヽ༼◉_◔ ༽ノ (◣ _ ◢)
Mira in THE FLIP 👸🏻🔃
Thank u all, who came to the opening. It was overwhelming finally seeing our project baby on the big screen.
THE FLIP is the story of Mira discovering her secret connection to the earth‘s geomagnetic field. She has what we call an other sense.
Go and experience THE FLIP for yourself at @w1curates, London — running all through May. Each viewing is unique. Live yours.
Book your slot. Link in bio.

This Friday, The Flip finally opens its doors.
Book your slot now to experience our immersive exhibition at @w1curates, London — running all through May.
Mira’s journey—a fallout without a manual—hits differently after Monday’s massive blackout across the Iberian Peninsula.
When fiction mirrors reality, you have to ask: is the present catching up to the simulation, or is the simulation rewriting the present?
Don’t just watch. Experience it.
Link in bio.

This Friday, The Flip finally opens its doors.
Book your slot now to experience our immersive exhibition at @w1curates, London — running all through May.
Mira’s journey—a fallout without a manual—hits differently after Monday’s massive blackout across the Iberian Peninsula.
When fiction mirrors reality, you have to ask: is the present catching up to the simulation, or is the simulation rewriting the present?
Don’t just watch. Experience it.
Link in bio.

This Friday, The Flip finally opens its doors.
Book your slot now to experience our immersive exhibition at @w1curates, London — running all through May.
Mira’s journey—a fallout without a manual—hits differently after Monday’s massive blackout across the Iberian Peninsula.
When fiction mirrors reality, you have to ask: is the present catching up to the simulation, or is the simulation rewriting the present?
Don’t just watch. Experience it.
Link in bio.

This Friday, The Flip finally opens its doors.
Book your slot now to experience our immersive exhibition at @w1curates, London — running all through May.
Mira’s journey—a fallout without a manual—hits differently after Monday’s massive blackout across the Iberian Peninsula.
When fiction mirrors reality, you have to ask: is the present catching up to the simulation, or is the simulation rewriting the present?
Don’t just watch. Experience it.
Link in bio.

This Friday, The Flip finally opens its doors.
Book your slot now to experience our immersive exhibition at @w1curates, London — running all through May.
Mira’s journey—a fallout without a manual—hits differently after Monday’s massive blackout across the Iberian Peninsula.
When fiction mirrors reality, you have to ask: is the present catching up to the simulation, or is the simulation rewriting the present?
Don’t just watch. Experience it.
Link in bio.

This Friday, The Flip finally opens its doors.
Book your slot now to experience our immersive exhibition at @w1curates, London — running all through May.
Mira’s journey—a fallout without a manual—hits differently after Monday’s massive blackout across the Iberian Peninsula.
When fiction mirrors reality, you have to ask: is the present catching up to the simulation, or is the simulation rewriting the present?
Don’t just watch. Experience it.
Link in bio.

This Friday, The Flip finally opens its doors.
Book your slot now to experience our immersive exhibition at @w1curates, London — running all through May.
Mira’s journey—a fallout without a manual—hits differently after Monday’s massive blackout across the Iberian Peninsula.
When fiction mirrors reality, you have to ask: is the present catching up to the simulation, or is the simulation rewriting the present?
Don’t just watch. Experience it.
Link in bio.

What is the difference between a signal and a symbol?
This was the question we kept returning to when designing our sigils.
A signal carries meaning.
A symbol is meaning.
In early transmission traditions, a symbol was not meant to explain. It was meaning compressed into form.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose, an Indian polymath, demonstrated that invisible waves could transmit a message through space, triggering an action on the other side: a bell ringing, a gesture executed, a signal becoming symbol. He did not patent it.
Years later, the Italian physicist Guglielmo Marconi commercialized wireless transmission. History remembered the marketable signal, not the original source.
When we think of radio today, we are often taught to think of Marconi. But Bose’s story reveals how innovation is extracted, renamed, and folded into colonial narratives of western superiority.
So we ask ourselves:
How do we want to be received?
Our sigils are not logos waiting to be admired.
Transmission was never meant to be owned.
It is an act of connection, the way Bose proved it: meaning carried across distance, endlessly received, transformed, and sent onward.
1. Radiogram 0041, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
2. Original double-prism attenuators, Jagadish Chandra Bose, 1897
3. Unknown
4. Millimeter-wave apparatus at the Bose Museum in Kolkata, J. C. Bose, 1895
5. @pushpamalan
6. Radiogram 005, Transmoderna x @xyzalanix
7. Radiogram 0039, Transmoderna x NMR

What is the difference between a signal and a symbol?
This was the question we kept returning to when designing our sigils.
A signal carries meaning.
A symbol is meaning.
In early transmission traditions, a symbol was not meant to explain. It was meaning compressed into form.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose, an Indian polymath, demonstrated that invisible waves could transmit a message through space, triggering an action on the other side: a bell ringing, a gesture executed, a signal becoming symbol. He did not patent it.
Years later, the Italian physicist Guglielmo Marconi commercialized wireless transmission. History remembered the marketable signal, not the original source.
When we think of radio today, we are often taught to think of Marconi. But Bose’s story reveals how innovation is extracted, renamed, and folded into colonial narratives of western superiority.
So we ask ourselves:
How do we want to be received?
Our sigils are not logos waiting to be admired.
Transmission was never meant to be owned.
It is an act of connection, the way Bose proved it: meaning carried across distance, endlessly received, transformed, and sent onward.
1. Radiogram 0041, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
2. Original double-prism attenuators, Jagadish Chandra Bose, 1897
3. Unknown
4. Millimeter-wave apparatus at the Bose Museum in Kolkata, J. C. Bose, 1895
5. @pushpamalan
6. Radiogram 005, Transmoderna x @xyzalanix
7. Radiogram 0039, Transmoderna x NMR

What is the difference between a signal and a symbol?
This was the question we kept returning to when designing our sigils.
A signal carries meaning.
A symbol is meaning.
In early transmission traditions, a symbol was not meant to explain. It was meaning compressed into form.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose, an Indian polymath, demonstrated that invisible waves could transmit a message through space, triggering an action on the other side: a bell ringing, a gesture executed, a signal becoming symbol. He did not patent it.
Years later, the Italian physicist Guglielmo Marconi commercialized wireless transmission. History remembered the marketable signal, not the original source.
When we think of radio today, we are often taught to think of Marconi. But Bose’s story reveals how innovation is extracted, renamed, and folded into colonial narratives of western superiority.
So we ask ourselves:
How do we want to be received?
Our sigils are not logos waiting to be admired.
Transmission was never meant to be owned.
It is an act of connection, the way Bose proved it: meaning carried across distance, endlessly received, transformed, and sent onward.
1. Radiogram 0041, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
2. Original double-prism attenuators, Jagadish Chandra Bose, 1897
3. Unknown
4. Millimeter-wave apparatus at the Bose Museum in Kolkata, J. C. Bose, 1895
5. @pushpamalan
6. Radiogram 005, Transmoderna x @xyzalanix
7. Radiogram 0039, Transmoderna x NMR

What is the difference between a signal and a symbol?
This was the question we kept returning to when designing our sigils.
A signal carries meaning.
A symbol is meaning.
In early transmission traditions, a symbol was not meant to explain. It was meaning compressed into form.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose, an Indian polymath, demonstrated that invisible waves could transmit a message through space, triggering an action on the other side: a bell ringing, a gesture executed, a signal becoming symbol. He did not patent it.
Years later, the Italian physicist Guglielmo Marconi commercialized wireless transmission. History remembered the marketable signal, not the original source.
When we think of radio today, we are often taught to think of Marconi. But Bose’s story reveals how innovation is extracted, renamed, and folded into colonial narratives of western superiority.
So we ask ourselves:
How do we want to be received?
Our sigils are not logos waiting to be admired.
Transmission was never meant to be owned.
It is an act of connection, the way Bose proved it: meaning carried across distance, endlessly received, transformed, and sent onward.
1. Radiogram 0041, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
2. Original double-prism attenuators, Jagadish Chandra Bose, 1897
3. Unknown
4. Millimeter-wave apparatus at the Bose Museum in Kolkata, J. C. Bose, 1895
5. @pushpamalan
6. Radiogram 005, Transmoderna x @xyzalanix
7. Radiogram 0039, Transmoderna x NMR

What is the difference between a signal and a symbol?
This was the question we kept returning to when designing our sigils.
A signal carries meaning.
A symbol is meaning.
In early transmission traditions, a symbol was not meant to explain. It was meaning compressed into form.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose, an Indian polymath, demonstrated that invisible waves could transmit a message through space, triggering an action on the other side: a bell ringing, a gesture executed, a signal becoming symbol. He did not patent it.
Years later, the Italian physicist Guglielmo Marconi commercialized wireless transmission. History remembered the marketable signal, not the original source.
When we think of radio today, we are often taught to think of Marconi. But Bose’s story reveals how innovation is extracted, renamed, and folded into colonial narratives of western superiority.
So we ask ourselves:
How do we want to be received?
Our sigils are not logos waiting to be admired.
Transmission was never meant to be owned.
It is an act of connection, the way Bose proved it: meaning carried across distance, endlessly received, transformed, and sent onward.
1. Radiogram 0041, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
2. Original double-prism attenuators, Jagadish Chandra Bose, 1897
3. Unknown
4. Millimeter-wave apparatus at the Bose Museum in Kolkata, J. C. Bose, 1895
5. @pushpamalan
6. Radiogram 005, Transmoderna x @xyzalanix
7. Radiogram 0039, Transmoderna x NMR
What is the difference between a signal and a symbol?
This was the question we kept returning to when designing our sigils.
A signal carries meaning.
A symbol is meaning.
In early transmission traditions, a symbol was not meant to explain. It was meaning compressed into form.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose, an Indian polymath, demonstrated that invisible waves could transmit a message through space, triggering an action on the other side: a bell ringing, a gesture executed, a signal becoming symbol. He did not patent it.
Years later, the Italian physicist Guglielmo Marconi commercialized wireless transmission. History remembered the marketable signal, not the original source.
When we think of radio today, we are often taught to think of Marconi. But Bose’s story reveals how innovation is extracted, renamed, and folded into colonial narratives of western superiority.
So we ask ourselves:
How do we want to be received?
Our sigils are not logos waiting to be admired.
Transmission was never meant to be owned.
It is an act of connection, the way Bose proved it: meaning carried across distance, endlessly received, transformed, and sent onward.
1. Radiogram 0041, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
2. Original double-prism attenuators, Jagadish Chandra Bose, 1897
3. Unknown
4. Millimeter-wave apparatus at the Bose Museum in Kolkata, J. C. Bose, 1895
5. @pushpamalan
6. Radiogram 005, Transmoderna x @xyzalanix
7. Radiogram 0039, Transmoderna x NMR

What is the difference between a signal and a symbol?
This was the question we kept returning to when designing our sigils.
A signal carries meaning.
A symbol is meaning.
In early transmission traditions, a symbol was not meant to explain. It was meaning compressed into form.
In 1894, Jagadish Chandra Bose, an Indian polymath, demonstrated that invisible waves could transmit a message through space, triggering an action on the other side: a bell ringing, a gesture executed, a signal becoming symbol. He did not patent it.
Years later, the Italian physicist Guglielmo Marconi commercialized wireless transmission. History remembered the marketable signal, not the original source.
When we think of radio today, we are often taught to think of Marconi. But Bose’s story reveals how innovation is extracted, renamed, and folded into colonial narratives of western superiority.
So we ask ourselves:
How do we want to be received?
Our sigils are not logos waiting to be admired.
Transmission was never meant to be owned.
It is an act of connection, the way Bose proved it: meaning carried across distance, endlessly received, transformed, and sent onward.
1. Radiogram 0041, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
2. Original double-prism attenuators, Jagadish Chandra Bose, 1897
3. Unknown
4. Millimeter-wave apparatus at the Bose Museum in Kolkata, J. C. Bose, 1895
5. @pushpamalan
6. Radiogram 005, Transmoderna x @xyzalanix
7. Radiogram 0039, Transmoderna x NMR

Three years ago this week we had our first show in New York. Still feels special *・。゚
To mark it, we return to some of the characters we specifically created for the occasion, characters that expressed their inner being through facial adornments. Metal pressed onto and into skin: grillz, ornaments, prosthetics sitting somewhere between protection and anger venting, pushing weird, but pleasurable buttons and shocks. It all became a Transy token, copied plentiful, never quite as iconic.
This was also not the first, but one of the most memorable collaborations with @figa.link, who gave Transy the gang, embodying its spirit more than anything.
This autumn we will return. Can’t be more excited to tell all soon.

Three years ago this week we had our first show in New York. Still feels special *・。゚
To mark it, we return to some of the characters we specifically created for the occasion, characters that expressed their inner being through facial adornments. Metal pressed onto and into skin: grillz, ornaments, prosthetics sitting somewhere between protection and anger venting, pushing weird, but pleasurable buttons and shocks. It all became a Transy token, copied plentiful, never quite as iconic.
This was also not the first, but one of the most memorable collaborations with @figa.link, who gave Transy the gang, embodying its spirit more than anything.
This autumn we will return. Can’t be more excited to tell all soon.
Three years ago this week we had our first show in New York. Still feels special *・。゚
To mark it, we return to some of the characters we specifically created for the occasion, characters that expressed their inner being through facial adornments. Metal pressed onto and into skin: grillz, ornaments, prosthetics sitting somewhere between protection and anger venting, pushing weird, but pleasurable buttons and shocks. It all became a Transy token, copied plentiful, never quite as iconic.
This was also not the first, but one of the most memorable collaborations with @figa.link, who gave Transy the gang, embodying its spirit more than anything.
This autumn we will return. Can’t be more excited to tell all soon.

Three years ago this week we had our first show in New York. Still feels special *・。゚
To mark it, we return to some of the characters we specifically created for the occasion, characters that expressed their inner being through facial adornments. Metal pressed onto and into skin: grillz, ornaments, prosthetics sitting somewhere between protection and anger venting, pushing weird, but pleasurable buttons and shocks. It all became a Transy token, copied plentiful, never quite as iconic.
This was also not the first, but one of the most memorable collaborations with @figa.link, who gave Transy the gang, embodying its spirit more than anything.
This autumn we will return. Can’t be more excited to tell all soon.

Three years ago this week we had our first show in New York. Still feels special *・。゚
To mark it, we return to some of the characters we specifically created for the occasion, characters that expressed their inner being through facial adornments. Metal pressed onto and into skin: grillz, ornaments, prosthetics sitting somewhere between protection and anger venting, pushing weird, but pleasurable buttons and shocks. It all became a Transy token, copied plentiful, never quite as iconic.
This was also not the first, but one of the most memorable collaborations with @figa.link, who gave Transy the gang, embodying its spirit more than anything.
This autumn we will return. Can’t be more excited to tell all soon.

Three years ago this week we had our first show in New York. Still feels special *・。゚
To mark it, we return to some of the characters we specifically created for the occasion, characters that expressed their inner being through facial adornments. Metal pressed onto and into skin: grillz, ornaments, prosthetics sitting somewhere between protection and anger venting, pushing weird, but pleasurable buttons and shocks. It all became a Transy token, copied plentiful, never quite as iconic.
This was also not the first, but one of the most memorable collaborations with @figa.link, who gave Transy the gang, embodying its spirit more than anything.
This autumn we will return. Can’t be more excited to tell all soon.
Blue. But darker.
Have you ever felt sound before you heard it? A low hum the body knows before the mind does. Not on the surface, underneath it.
The binaural waves work at that depth. What fascinates us is how quietly they work. The way two frequencies, slightly off from each other, can move something inside you that nothing else reaches.
Let your body follow. Don’t come back too fast.
Binaural theta by @trikkmusic
Blue screen 01.002 Transmoderna ♡ ̆̈ @minozzicarlos

Genau!
Hitting the sweet spot with our merch. These classics you don’t get to see in other ecosystems than the club, but they are there, vibing.
Send pics our way, when you see them in the wild 🪄👾
Visual series by @xyzalanix

Genau!
Hitting the sweet spot with our merch. These classics you don’t get to see in other ecosystems than the club, but they are there, vibing.
Send pics our way, when you see them in the wild 🪄👾
Visual series by @xyzalanix

Genau!
Hitting the sweet spot with our merch. These classics you don’t get to see in other ecosystems than the club, but they are there, vibing.
Send pics our way, when you see them in the wild 🪄👾
Visual series by @xyzalanix

Genau!
Hitting the sweet spot with our merch. These classics you don’t get to see in other ecosystems than the club, but they are there, vibing.
Send pics our way, when you see them in the wild 🪄👾
Visual series by @xyzalanix

Genau!
Hitting the sweet spot with our merch. These classics you don’t get to see in other ecosystems than the club, but they are there, vibing.
Send pics our way, when you see them in the wild 🪄👾
Visual series by @xyzalanix

Genau!
Hitting the sweet spot with our merch. These classics you don’t get to see in other ecosystems than the club, but they are there, vibing.
Send pics our way, when you see them in the wild 🪄👾
Visual series by @xyzalanix
Transmoderna is an artist collective and studio merging digital arts with electronic music. Their immersive multimedia installations and events infiltrate both museum and club environments–bridging the gap between two cultures often perceived as antithetical. Transmoderna was co-founded by Steffen Berkhahn (aka Dixon), music producer and DJ, and Ana Ofak, creative director and writer, in Berlin in 2018.
🚨 NYC CALLING 🗽
@transmoderna is a candidate to exhibit in Times Square during Frieze (May 13–15) on one of the largest and most iconic billboards in the city.
❤️ The more likes it gets, the higher the chances that their work will take over New York.
Support art: leave a like, share, and spread the word.
🎨 If you’re an artist and want to apply too, send an email requesting info to:
info@artinnovationgallery.com
What if the future drug wasn’t happiness
but awareness?
A pill that keeps you fully present
in the messy world around us.
You see more.
Care more for others.
Show up differently.
But if empathy is engineered…
does it still count?
Inspired by Elvia Wilk’s grand book Oval.
We’re still testing the answer.
Blue.
It’s in you.
Close your eyes softly as the color gets darker. Experience the afterglow. Allow the binaural waves to carry you deep. Touch that space. Does it resonate?
Binaural theta offering by @trikkmusic
Blue screen 01.000 Transmoderna ♡ ̆̈ @minozzicarlos

What if the screen could breathe – together - with you?
Before we consciously read a screen, our bodies have already responded to it. Its electromagnetic wavelengths stimulate neural pathways, while its color acts on perception before awareness even begins. It’s a specific blue, one that keeps us awake.
Not all blues are the same. The frequency of blue, which is the most concentrated in the visible spectrum, speaks directly to the autonomic nervous system. The sky and the ocean have trained us in this for eons. Expansive systems that have regulated consciousness long before culture and technology. Inspired by our research into high sensitivity, we explore blue as a threshold state between the world and the subconscious self.
For highly sensitive people, this is not metaphorical. They operate on different bandwidths, picking up signals many miss. Yet through accelerated lives, constant exposure to high-intensity impulses, and doomsday news, all of us enter states of heightened sensitivity more often than we realize. Recalibration, in this context, no longer arrives through relaxation or de-stress rituals alone. It is found in frequencies of daydreaming, sonorous, deep, expansive. Blue.
We are sharing our exploration of the blue spectrum and its sister sounds, theta binaural waves with intention. In the coming weeks, we will introduce “blue screens” into our feed. Find them. Close your eyes after seeing them and listen. Take in the frequency and allow it to recalibrate you. This is for you. Let the sensation in. And see where it takes you…
1. Blue Room, Transmoderna, 2025
2. Above the clouds
3. Blue grotto on Capri
4. Rave blue
5. Inside a glacier, @martinfroger
6. Flames in zero gravity, @saint
7. Sigil 01, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc

What if the screen could breathe – together - with you?
Before we consciously read a screen, our bodies have already responded to it. Its electromagnetic wavelengths stimulate neural pathways, while its color acts on perception before awareness even begins. It’s a specific blue, one that keeps us awake.
Not all blues are the same. The frequency of blue, which is the most concentrated in the visible spectrum, speaks directly to the autonomic nervous system. The sky and the ocean have trained us in this for eons. Expansive systems that have regulated consciousness long before culture and technology. Inspired by our research into high sensitivity, we explore blue as a threshold state between the world and the subconscious self.
For highly sensitive people, this is not metaphorical. They operate on different bandwidths, picking up signals many miss. Yet through accelerated lives, constant exposure to high-intensity impulses, and doomsday news, all of us enter states of heightened sensitivity more often than we realize. Recalibration, in this context, no longer arrives through relaxation or de-stress rituals alone. It is found in frequencies of daydreaming, sonorous, deep, expansive. Blue.
We are sharing our exploration of the blue spectrum and its sister sounds, theta binaural waves with intention. In the coming weeks, we will introduce “blue screens” into our feed. Find them. Close your eyes after seeing them and listen. Take in the frequency and allow it to recalibrate you. This is for you. Let the sensation in. And see where it takes you…
1. Blue Room, Transmoderna, 2025
2. Above the clouds
3. Blue grotto on Capri
4. Rave blue
5. Inside a glacier, @martinfroger
6. Flames in zero gravity, @saint
7. Sigil 01, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc

What if the screen could breathe – together - with you?
Before we consciously read a screen, our bodies have already responded to it. Its electromagnetic wavelengths stimulate neural pathways, while its color acts on perception before awareness even begins. It’s a specific blue, one that keeps us awake.
Not all blues are the same. The frequency of blue, which is the most concentrated in the visible spectrum, speaks directly to the autonomic nervous system. The sky and the ocean have trained us in this for eons. Expansive systems that have regulated consciousness long before culture and technology. Inspired by our research into high sensitivity, we explore blue as a threshold state between the world and the subconscious self.
For highly sensitive people, this is not metaphorical. They operate on different bandwidths, picking up signals many miss. Yet through accelerated lives, constant exposure to high-intensity impulses, and doomsday news, all of us enter states of heightened sensitivity more often than we realize. Recalibration, in this context, no longer arrives through relaxation or de-stress rituals alone. It is found in frequencies of daydreaming, sonorous, deep, expansive. Blue.
We are sharing our exploration of the blue spectrum and its sister sounds, theta binaural waves with intention. In the coming weeks, we will introduce “blue screens” into our feed. Find them. Close your eyes after seeing them and listen. Take in the frequency and allow it to recalibrate you. This is for you. Let the sensation in. And see where it takes you…
1. Blue Room, Transmoderna, 2025
2. Above the clouds
3. Blue grotto on Capri
4. Rave blue
5. Inside a glacier, @martinfroger
6. Flames in zero gravity, @saint
7. Sigil 01, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc

What if the screen could breathe – together - with you?
Before we consciously read a screen, our bodies have already responded to it. Its electromagnetic wavelengths stimulate neural pathways, while its color acts on perception before awareness even begins. It’s a specific blue, one that keeps us awake.
Not all blues are the same. The frequency of blue, which is the most concentrated in the visible spectrum, speaks directly to the autonomic nervous system. The sky and the ocean have trained us in this for eons. Expansive systems that have regulated consciousness long before culture and technology. Inspired by our research into high sensitivity, we explore blue as a threshold state between the world and the subconscious self.
For highly sensitive people, this is not metaphorical. They operate on different bandwidths, picking up signals many miss. Yet through accelerated lives, constant exposure to high-intensity impulses, and doomsday news, all of us enter states of heightened sensitivity more often than we realize. Recalibration, in this context, no longer arrives through relaxation or de-stress rituals alone. It is found in frequencies of daydreaming, sonorous, deep, expansive. Blue.
We are sharing our exploration of the blue spectrum and its sister sounds, theta binaural waves with intention. In the coming weeks, we will introduce “blue screens” into our feed. Find them. Close your eyes after seeing them and listen. Take in the frequency and allow it to recalibrate you. This is for you. Let the sensation in. And see where it takes you…
1. Blue Room, Transmoderna, 2025
2. Above the clouds
3. Blue grotto on Capri
4. Rave blue
5. Inside a glacier, @martinfroger
6. Flames in zero gravity, @saint
7. Sigil 01, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc
What if the screen could breathe – together - with you?
Before we consciously read a screen, our bodies have already responded to it. Its electromagnetic wavelengths stimulate neural pathways, while its color acts on perception before awareness even begins. It’s a specific blue, one that keeps us awake.
Not all blues are the same. The frequency of blue, which is the most concentrated in the visible spectrum, speaks directly to the autonomic nervous system. The sky and the ocean have trained us in this for eons. Expansive systems that have regulated consciousness long before culture and technology. Inspired by our research into high sensitivity, we explore blue as a threshold state between the world and the subconscious self.
For highly sensitive people, this is not metaphorical. They operate on different bandwidths, picking up signals many miss. Yet through accelerated lives, constant exposure to high-intensity impulses, and doomsday news, all of us enter states of heightened sensitivity more often than we realize. Recalibration, in this context, no longer arrives through relaxation or de-stress rituals alone. It is found in frequencies of daydreaming, sonorous, deep, expansive. Blue.
We are sharing our exploration of the blue spectrum and its sister sounds, theta binaural waves with intention. In the coming weeks, we will introduce “blue screens” into our feed. Find them. Close your eyes after seeing them and listen. Take in the frequency and allow it to recalibrate you. This is for you. Let the sensation in. And see where it takes you…
1. Blue Room, Transmoderna, 2025
2. Above the clouds
3. Blue grotto on Capri
4. Rave blue
5. Inside a glacier, @martinfroger
6. Flames in zero gravity, @saint
7. Sigil 01, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc

What if the screen could breathe – together - with you?
Before we consciously read a screen, our bodies have already responded to it. Its electromagnetic wavelengths stimulate neural pathways, while its color acts on perception before awareness even begins. It’s a specific blue, one that keeps us awake.
Not all blues are the same. The frequency of blue, which is the most concentrated in the visible spectrum, speaks directly to the autonomic nervous system. The sky and the ocean have trained us in this for eons. Expansive systems that have regulated consciousness long before culture and technology. Inspired by our research into high sensitivity, we explore blue as a threshold state between the world and the subconscious self.
For highly sensitive people, this is not metaphorical. They operate on different bandwidths, picking up signals many miss. Yet through accelerated lives, constant exposure to high-intensity impulses, and doomsday news, all of us enter states of heightened sensitivity more often than we realize. Recalibration, in this context, no longer arrives through relaxation or de-stress rituals alone. It is found in frequencies of daydreaming, sonorous, deep, expansive. Blue.
We are sharing our exploration of the blue spectrum and its sister sounds, theta binaural waves with intention. In the coming weeks, we will introduce “blue screens” into our feed. Find them. Close your eyes after seeing them and listen. Take in the frequency and allow it to recalibrate you. This is for you. Let the sensation in. And see where it takes you…
1. Blue Room, Transmoderna, 2025
2. Above the clouds
3. Blue grotto on Capri
4. Rave blue
5. Inside a glacier, @martinfroger
6. Flames in zero gravity, @saint
7. Sigil 01, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc

What if the screen could breathe – together - with you?
Before we consciously read a screen, our bodies have already responded to it. Its electromagnetic wavelengths stimulate neural pathways, while its color acts on perception before awareness even begins. It’s a specific blue, one that keeps us awake.
Not all blues are the same. The frequency of blue, which is the most concentrated in the visible spectrum, speaks directly to the autonomic nervous system. The sky and the ocean have trained us in this for eons. Expansive systems that have regulated consciousness long before culture and technology. Inspired by our research into high sensitivity, we explore blue as a threshold state between the world and the subconscious self.
For highly sensitive people, this is not metaphorical. They operate on different bandwidths, picking up signals many miss. Yet through accelerated lives, constant exposure to high-intensity impulses, and doomsday news, all of us enter states of heightened sensitivity more often than we realize. Recalibration, in this context, no longer arrives through relaxation or de-stress rituals alone. It is found in frequencies of daydreaming, sonorous, deep, expansive. Blue.
We are sharing our exploration of the blue spectrum and its sister sounds, theta binaural waves with intention. In the coming weeks, we will introduce “blue screens” into our feed. Find them. Close your eyes after seeing them and listen. Take in the frequency and allow it to recalibrate you. This is for you. Let the sensation in. And see where it takes you…
1. Blue Room, Transmoderna, 2025
2. Above the clouds
3. Blue grotto on Capri
4. Rave blue
5. Inside a glacier, @martinfroger
6. Flames in zero gravity, @saint
7. Sigil 01, Transmoderna x @nmrdotcc

Say hi to the team
Ana is the co-founder and creative director at Transmoderna. A writer and researcher. Occasionally gluing together worlds with words. Ideation as vocation.
“Transmoderna allows me to imagine worlds that are speculative and self-evolving. Together with the team, we build visual scenarios and soundscapes that are eerily relatable yet fictional enough to let us dream,” she explains.
“2026 will be a year of pressing forward with a new approach: showcasing our work in audience-engaging environments we design ourselves. Spaces that hold both shards of our ongoing practice and the art we have already made, a living organism.”
“This portrait Mélanie Courtinat did of me, when we met in Amsterdam during ADE 2023 to do a talk for Cercle, neatly represents how I work. Through a simple swing with an iPhone, Mélanie did a 3D capture of me and placed the scan into one of her landscapes. I now live inside her world, adding my note to it, like my words live in our Transmoderna worlds, setting the tonality. Holding space for what is still to come.”
Portrait: @melanie.courtinat
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