Cutepercentage Gallery (2027)
In an era where digital validation often dictates the value of art, the conceptual installation “cutepercentage gallery” emerges as a provocative mirror held up to the culture of online aesthetics. At first glance, the name suggests a whimsical, perhaps saccharine, exhibition of puppy photos and pastel illustrations. However, to engage with the “cutepercentage gallery” is to confront a deeply unsettling question: What happens when subjective affection is rendered into an objective, quantifiable metric?
Crucially, the “cutepercentage gallery” implicates the viewer as both critic and subject. As you stand before an image, a small camera tracks your gaze. Do you smile? Do you look away? Do you linger for three seconds or ten? Your biological responses are immediately fed into the score. The gallery exposes the performance inherent in modern looking: we have learned to curate our reactions. Faced with a video of a clumsy panda, we know to perform delight. Faced with a documentary photo of suffering, we scroll past quickly to avoid lowering our own emotional “percentage.” cutepercentage gallery
The most powerful moment in the “cutepercentage gallery” is the final room. Here, there is no image, only a white plinth with a single word engraved in gold: “Ambiguity.” Below it, the digital screen reads a steady . No matter how long a viewer stands there, the number never changes. The algorithm cannot parse uncertainty. It cannot score the beautiful-ugly, the tragicomic, or the quietly profound. In an era where digital validation often dictates

















