Article
Intervista di Giulia Zentimolomo su X- Style
2025
Born from the idea that color could act as sound, “Neon Haze” was our boldest sensory experiment yet. The performance unfolded like a fever dream: strobes flickered to invisible rhythms, lasers sliced through fog thick enough to taste, and the crowd became silhouettes dissolving into ultraviolet air. But behind the chaos was intent — every flash corresponded to the frequencies of human movement in real time. The result was total immersion, a space where boundaries disappeared and emotion took over. For hours, the audience didn’t watch light; they became it. The night ended not with applause, but with quiet disbelief. “Neon Haze” wasn’t about control — it was about surrendering to color until it became language.
How do you find balance between intensity and beauty?
By letting go of the need for balance entirely. We live in a culture addicted to perfection — symmetry, softness, comfort. “Neon Haze” was our refusal of all that. Beauty doesn’t come from harmony; it comes from collision. When lights hit fog and blind you, when sound vibrates your bones — that’s when you feel. The point wasn’t to design something pretty. It was to make something honest. Intensity forces truth to the surface. In chaos, the body responds before the brain — and that’s when art stops being entertainment and starts being revelation.

