Signal Station

Signal Station

Artist Interview

Artist Interview

Meet Me at B612 - 01

Riley T

Meet Me at B612 - 01

Meet Me at B612 - 01

Riley T

Riley T

Description

Description

Photography-based digital layering

Variable

2025

Photography-based digital layering

Variable

2025

“Meet Me At B612 – 01” is a visual homage to the imaginary planet from The Little Prince, exploring intimacy, distance, and belonging. The layered light and subtle textures create a dreamlike space where nostalgia meets new emotional geographies — a quiet invitation to find home in another’s orbit.

Based on its literary inspiration, the viewer is taken into an intimate universe of nostalgia, longing, and childlike wonder. Built from layered city lights, cosmic textures, and soft gradients, the piece evokes a quiet wish to reconnect across time, distance, and dimension. It speaks to all who’ve ever waited at their own small planet, hoping to be found, or to remember what was once so easy to believe in: magic, love, and the gravity of a single rose. "I’ll meet you there - in the stillness between stars." - Riley T from her interview

Artist Note

Artist Note

Inspired by The Little Prince, Meet Me at B612 invites the viewer into an intimate universe of nostalgia, longing, and childlike wonder. Built from layered city lights, cosmic textures, and soft gradients, the piece evokes a quiet wish to reconnect across time, distance, and dimension. It speaks to all who’ve ever waited at their own small planet, hoping to be found, or to remember what was once so easy to believe in: magic, love, and the gravity of a single rose.

“Meet Me At B612 – 01” is a visual homage to the imaginary planet from The Little Prince, exploring intimacy, distance, and belonging. The layered light and subtle textures create a dreamlike space where nostalgia meets new emotional geographies — a quiet invitation to find home in another’s orbit.

Based on its literary inspiration, the viewer is taken into an intimate universe of nostalgia, longing, and childlike wonder. Built from layered city lights, cosmic textures, and soft gradients, the piece evokes a quiet wish to reconnect across time, distance, and dimension. It speaks to all who’ve ever waited at their own small planet, hoping to be found, or to remember what was once so easy to believe in: magic, love, and the gravity of a single rose. "I’ll meet you there - in the stillness between stars." - Riley T from her interview

Inspired by The Little Prince, Meet Me at B612 invites the viewer into an intimate universe of nostalgia, longing, and childlike wonder. Built from layered city lights, cosmic textures, and soft gradients, the piece evokes a quiet wish to reconnect across time, distance, and dimension. It speaks to all who’ve ever waited at their own small planet, hoping to be found, or to remember what was once so easy to believe in: magic, love, and the gravity of a single rose.

Tell us about yourself and your artistic journey.

I’m Riley, a London-based digital artist from Hong Kong, working under the name SeNeon Art. My creative journey began with journaling and photography as ways to make sense of fleeting thoughts and emotions. Over time, these transformed into layered digital compositions — visual echoes of feelings I couldn’t yet name. What keeps me making is that mystery: art as a way to listen to myself, and a way for others to feel seen too.

What’s the story behind the piece you’re sharing with us?

This work grew from a quiet longing to reconnect — not only with people, but with feelings and inner voices that fade over time. Its layers of light and texture echo the way memory works: soft, luminous, and never fully linear. I imagined it as a promise to meet again in a space untouched by time.

How does the QR code street exhition format shape your approach to the viewer’s experience?

I like that QR codes create a kind of hidden entrance. Someone might be walking past, scan out of curiosity, and suddenly be immersed in something intimate and unplanned. It’s public, yet deeply private — a small drift away from the everyday.

With our exhibition theme in mind, when did you last get wonderfully lost—in a city, a thought, or your studio?

Recently I wandered South London chasing golden-hour light with no destination in mind. I noticed reflections in puddles, overheard a stranger’s laugh, and found a new path for a piece I’d been stuck on. That’s my favourite kind of “lost.”

If your art could speak, what would it say to passersby?

It might whisper, “Hey. I see you thinking. Stay a little longer.” Or maybe just, “This way in.”

Tell us about yourself and your artistic journey.

I’m Riley, a London-based digital artist from Hong Kong, working under the name SeNeon Art. My creative journey began with journaling and photography as ways to make sense of fleeting thoughts and emotions. Over time, these transformed into layered digital compositions — visual echoes of feelings I couldn’t yet name. What keeps me making is that mystery: art as a way to listen to myself, and a way for others to feel seen too.

What’s the story behind the piece you’re sharing with us?

This work grew from a quiet longing to reconnect — not only with people, but with feelings and inner voices that fade over time. Its layers of light and texture echo the way memory works: soft, luminous, and never fully linear. I imagined it as a promise to meet again in a space untouched by time.

How does the QR code street exhition format shape your approach to the viewer’s experience?

I like that QR codes create a kind of hidden entrance. Someone might be walking past, scan out of curiosity, and suddenly be immersed in something intimate and unplanned. It’s public, yet deeply private — a small drift away from the everyday.

With our exhibition theme in mind, when did you last get wonderfully lost—in a city, a thought, or your studio?

Recently I wandered South London chasing golden-hour light with no destination in mind. I noticed reflections in puddles, overheard a stranger’s laugh, and found a new path for a piece I’d been stuck on. That’s my favourite kind of “lost.”

If your art could speak, what would it say to passersby?

It might whisper, “Hey. I see you thinking. Stay a little longer.” Or maybe just, “This way in.”