Looking at its composition, my group of sculptures Uniforms is made up of three conoid figures that seem identical in their basic, straightened out state with their surface decorated by large, deformed rhombuses reminiscent of jesters. However, if we turn the sculpture joints at the cuts also marked by the intersection of the patterns, we can recognize that they do not behave in the same way, they move differently. Since they are interactive, i.e. visitors can control their various positions, they can observe that the turning planes or cut surfaces (e.g. the spherical cap)
are designed differently or set at a different angle, accordingly if we turn them, they take up completely different, fragmented or bent positions.
The only sure thing is that they are unable to imitate each other, because their structural characteristics are different. The title I used most often for this work is Uniforms, since in a specific moment, setup and from a simplified perspective they certainly do seem identical. In fact, however, they can assume an infinite number of conditions and positions, just like soldiers or other persons in uniforms, whose heart beats differently under their identical outfits and have different hobbies and personal characteristics.