
The Gold Kiss Room is an intimate, immersive installation that explores desire, spectacle, and collective looking through the language of luxury. Framed by deep black walls and architectural gold detailing, the space draws visitors toward a glowing video work where molten, abstracted forms suggest lips, breath, and touch without ever becoming literal. The room is deliberately small, heightening proximity and intensity, allowing the gold imagery to spill softly onto faces and surfaces. Viewers enter quietly, slowed by the atmosphere, stepping into a moment that feels both private and ceremonial.

Designed as a site of shared attention, The Gold Kiss Room invites contemplation of how intimacy is mediated, recorded, and consumed. Visitors gather close, some watching in stillness, others lifting their phones to capture fragments of the experience, creating a subtle tension between presence and documentation. The installation balances glamour with restraint—opulent without excess—offering a space where beauty, desire, and observation fold into one another. It is less a spectacle to be consumed than a moment to be entered, lingered within, and remembered.

The "Golden Confessional" is an immersive installation by Marko Stout that invites visitors into a private moment concealed within public luxury. At first glance, the work appears restrained—an elegant champagne-gold structure placed with quiet confidence in its surroundings. Step inside, and the world narrows. Gold surfaces glow softly. Sound fades. Time slows. A single phrase confronts the visitor with an intimate truth, transforming excess into introspection.

Neither spectacle nor sanctuary, "Golden Confessional" explores the tension between desire, restraint and how luxury is often worn as armor, becoming the most powerful when it is stripped of performance. The experience is brief, personal, and intentionally solitary, creating a space where glamour does not impress, but listens.
. "Golden Confessional" is not about what we show the world. It is about what we admit when no one is watching.