living art meets the art of living | scorpios encounters, mykonos

Scorpios Mykonos rises from the Cycladic shore as a sanctuary of elevated ritual, soundscapes and mindful leisure. It’s an emblematic establishment that has long redefined the concept of the shoreline retreat. Scorpios is not just a Mykonian escape, its glimmering afternoons and electric nights are where art, mindfulness and wellness intertwine, offering an evolution of the legendary island it calls home. 

In keeping with this philosophy, the annual art festival Scorpios Encounters explores the intersection of creativity and technology. This year, from 26 July to 28 August, the program invited five pioneering digital creators to bring their performances to audiences in Mykonos and at its new sister destination in Bodrum, Turkey. As part of its longstanding partnership with contemporary art tastemakers HOFA gallery from London, this season of Encounters explored longevity through the curatorial theme of “Ever After.”

The programme featured Croatian artist Maja Petrić whose ‘Specimens of Time’ series showcased sculptural forms that merge light, AI and tactile materials. Housed in translucent enclosures, the pieces aimed to capture the essence of untamed nature. At first glance, viewers were immersed in a glow of luminescence and mesmerising motion as an homage to flora and fauna, but they were also offered a window to contemplate their own fragility. Petrić’s work, alongside those of the other artists, resonated with the wider spirit of Encounters and Scorpios itself: the embrace of expression, community and ceremony, forever and “ever after.”

Congratulations on your exhibition with Encounters at Scorpios. Could you talk us through the concept behind your ‘Specimens of Time’ collection?

‘Specimens of Time’ is a series of light sculptures driven by data that encapsulate the sensory qualities of unspoiled natural settings. Each artwork uses environmental information, light and optical materials to reinterpret the ambiance of untouched landscapes that are threatened, or experiencing significant transformations, into a glowing artefact. [It’s] similar to preserving a living memory. These pieces are both poetic and scientific, acting as reminders of delicate ecosystems that are closely tied to our sense of being.

This year’s Encounters programme is framed around exploring longevity. How does your work speak to that theme?

Longevity is at the heart of ‘Specimens of Time.’ The works preserve the fleeting atmosphere of fragile ecosystems, giving them a form that can endure long after the moment has passed. They are reminders that our own longevity is inseparable from nature’s. We are nature and if we wish to live and thrive, we must preserve that connection because our survival depends on the survival of the natural world.

Your practice merges art, technology and AI to explore humanity’s relationship with nature. How do you use these mediums to both celebrate its beauty and convey the urgency of protecting it?

I see technology not as a replacement for nature, but as an artistic tool. One that can carry information, memory, and emotion and use them in storytelling to evoke our connection to the natural world. By using AI, real-time data and light as a medium, I can translate environmental processes into immersive experiences that awaken both wonder and awareness. Beauty and urgency coexist in these works. They remind us of our shared connection to nature while also pointing to the pressing need to protect it.

‘Specimens of Time’ transforms ephemeral climate patterns into something tangible and lasting. What do you hope viewers carry with them after encountering the work?

I hope people carry a renewed sense of intimacy with the natural world, a recognition that we are not separate from it but intertwined. I want them to leave with both awe at the beauty of what still exists and a quiet urgency to safeguard it.

At Scorpios, your installation exists not just in a gallery setting, but within a curated environment that embodies elevated living and cultural resonance. How do you see your work conversing with the space’s ethos of blending art and community?

Scorpios is less a venue than a living ritual, a place where people gather to share time, rhythm and atmosphere. ‘Specimens of Time’ speaks to that spirit. It is a work meant to breathe with its surroundings, to shift with light and weather, and to invite people into a shared moment of reflection. In this setting, the sculpture doesn’t stand apart as an object, it becomes part of the communal pulse, extending its memory of nature into the collective experience of those who encounter it.

Finally, tell us about your outdoor sculpture — how does it resonate with Mykonos itself?

The outdoor piece, ‘Specimens of Time: Mykonos,’ mirrors the rhythm of the sea around the island. Its lightscape shifts with wind, sunlight, and water temperature, visually echoing the Aegean’s atmosphere. When the recorded sea temperature rises beyond its normal range, the cube glows red, a reminder of the warming ocean. It’s both artifact and atmosphere, a living memory of Mykonos’ fragile coastal environment, suspended in light.

photography. Miltos Dimas
words. Sarah Diab