Untitled

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An interactive door that opens onto a new scene with each encounter, suggesting movement, transition, and the possibility of elsewhere.

About the Project

Untitled is an interactive door installation that functions as a threshold to someplace else. Each time the door is opened, a different scene is revealed, shifting the viewer’s sense of space and expectation. The work uses repetition and variation to create a simple yet open-ended experience, where the act of opening becomes a moment of discovery.

Through its changing scenes, the installation encourages reflection on movement, choice, and the quiet transitions that shape how we understand place and presence.

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Artpiece dimensions
Door: 6′ x 6′ x 4′ , Stand: 4′ x 4′

Artpiece price
$1500

Together, they built a shared language between disciplines, translating data, material, and emotion into new forms of expression.

THE TEAM
ARx connects artists and researchers through residencies, exhibitions, and education.
Phoenix Bioscience Core
Get to know PBC Art Committee

WHERE Creativity Image of an Art piece Meets Research • 

Marshall Shore
As both an artist and a storyteller, Marshall Shore creates and shares narratives that blend performance, visual art, and community memory. His work transforms overlooked stories into interactive experiences, bridging the gap between past and present, and reminding audiences that history is alive all around us.
Jean Robey
Jean Robey is a nephrologist in Sun City, Arizona and is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Banner Boswell Medical Center and Banner Del E. Webb Medical Center. She received her medical degree from University of Arizona College of Medicine-Tucson and has been in practice for more than 20 years.
Aviva Weinberg
Dr. Aviva Weinberg is a urologic surgeon and classically trained visual artist whose work explores the intersection of medicine, identity, and narrative. At Kaiser Permanente, she leads initiatives in men and women’s urologic health, physician communication, and process improvement. Her portrait series (included in this exhibit) Faces–Unmasked emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic, when masks and isolation fractured our most basic human connection: the ability to see each other’s faces. She painted 100 portraits as acts of restoration—each one an attempt to unveil the emotion, identity, and inner life obscured by fabric and fear.