Double Vision explores the superstitional logic of doubling—twins, reflections, mirrored outcomes—and the cultural symbols that reinforce it. At center, a pair of vintage twins stand side by side, ghostly and emotionally suspended. Their presence evokes folklore around twins as omens, doppelgängers, or psychic mirrors. They are not identical, but they are inseparable.
To the upper left, the Lucky Charms cereal logo introduces commercialized luck—rainbows, charms, and childhood ritual. Below it, a woman gazes into a hand mirror, lost in her own reflection. She becomes a visual echo of the twins, but also a counterpoint: singular, absorbed, and emotionally opaque.
Behind her, constellations thread cosmic logic into the field—suggesting fate, pattern, and celestial superstition. To the right, paint splotches run messily over the Doublemint gum logo, a brand long associated with twins and mirrored identity. Below it, an elevation diagram introduces topographic logic—land as layered, belief as mapped.
Double Vision allows its symbols to collide. A canvas of mirrored superstition and cultural residue, where luck, identity, and reflection blur into a field of emotional and visual doubling.
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