


Mirror Echo
Echo is a series of mirrors conceived as fragments of a landscape. Where an ordinary object reflects an image, Echo opens a space for projection: the polished metal surface captures light, disrupts the reflection, and transforms the simple act of looking at oneself into a contemplative experience. To lean over Echo is to rediscover an ancestral gesture: observing one's reflection at the edge of a lake or on the shore of an ocean. We do not merely look at ourselves — we get lost in it.
A strange stone, seemingly from elsewhere, comes to rest within the polished metal dome. A minimal gesture, a powerful evocation: a rock disturbing the water, a fragment of territory extracted from its landscape. The mirror becomes a medallion, the medallion becomes a world.
Between function and contemplation, Doppel explores the sensory relationship between human beings, material, and the landscape. Echo is not a mirror we look at — it is a mirror that looks at us.