Digital Media Projects

Explorations in video, animation, and interactive storytelling developed as part of university study. These works bridge time and culture through moving images and design, reflecting a practice in progress — one that invites immersive encounters and experiments with new ways of seeing.

Fictional Exhibition: Kansuke Yamamoto at TOP Museum

As part of a university design brief, Révész developed visual collateral for a fictional exhibition of Japanese surrealist photographer Kansuke Yamamoto, hypothetically set at Tokyo Photographic Art Museum. Drawing on Yamamoto’s archival images, the project explored surrealism and symbolism through posters and promotional design. This is a student project with no affiliation to the artist or museum.

Luminous Echoes: Fictional Festival Design

In this university project, Révész created branding, print, and digital design for Luminous Echoes—a fictional ambient classical music festival set in Reykjavík. The work included a printed brochure and responsive UX/UI designs for mobile and desktop platforms. This is a student project with no real-world affiliation.

As part of a digital media assignment exploring motion design, Révész created a 15-second animated advertisement for the Magritte exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. All visual assets were hand-designed, drawing inspiration from René Magritte’s surrealist imagery. With layered symbolism, unexpected transitions, and dissonant sound design, the piece captures the dreamlike logic and quiet disruption found in Magritte’s work.
Student project, not affiliated with AGNSW.

Motion Graphic: Surrealist Animation for Magritte

Reflective Visions

This online exhibition was developed in response to the concept of museums as sites for storytelling. Using Adobe Express, Révész created a digital experience that weaves personal and cultural narratives through self-portrait photography. The project reflects on identity, history, and memory, inviting viewers into an intimate exploration of self within broader cultural frameworks.
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Created as a student project.

Digital Story: Through Her, the World

Created as part of a broader exhibition concept exploring female Impressionist painters and their depictions of motherhood, this digital story shifts the lens inward. Titled Through Her, the World: A Study in Light and Love, Révész reflects on her own relationship with her mother, weaving together personal archive materials, quiet narration, and visual motifs of care and inheritance. The piece explores how memory, love, and light move through generations — a quiet tribute to maternal presence and artistic legacy.
Created as a student project exploring storytelling through visual culture.