Space Time Layering
ASO Keyword Dashboard
Tracking 2 keywords for Space Time Layering in Apple App Store
Space Time Layering tracks 2 keywords (2 keywords rank; full coverage across the tracked set). Key metrics: 0% top-10 coverage, opportunity 71.0, difficulty 37.7, best rank 70.
Tracked keywords
2
2 ranked • 0 not ranking yet
Top 10 coverage
0%
Best rank 70 • Latest leader 88
Avg opportunity
71.0
Top keyword: layer
Avg difficulty
37.7
Lower scores indicate easier wins
Opportunity leaders
- 61.1
layer
Opportunity: 72.0 • Difficulty: 38.8 • Rank 88
Competitors: 133
- 48.2
layered
Opportunity: 70.0 • Difficulty: 36.6 • Rank 70
Competitors: 19
Unranked opportunities
Every tracked keyword currently has some ranking data.
High competition keywords
layer
Total apps: 4,739 • Major competitors: 133
Latest rank: 88 • Difficulty: 38.8
layered
Total apps: 787 • Major competitors: 19
Latest rank: 70 • Difficulty: 36.6
All tracked keywords
Includes opportunity, difficulty, rankings and competitor benchmarks
App Description
The menu item “Placing artworks” allows users to freely pause and position the digital artworks “Flexible Areas” and “Collective Maze.” This creative act of freedom foregrounds the principles of artistic appropriation and collective experience. The conscious lingering and pausing reflect Bleisteiner’s artistic practice, which always works with layers of time, space, and memory.
In the “Stretching bands” section, interactive lines are anchored in space. These bands connect different places of memory and create a dynamic network serving as a metaphor for the complexity of history and social relationships. The AI-supported function playfully assists in creating additional narrative layers.
The “Women portraits” section brings the voices of important female artists, writers, and philosophers from different epochs into the space. Users encounter pioneers like George Sand, a trailblazer of female autonomy and creative freedom, and Bettina von Arnim, a voice of Romanticism and social critique. Their fragmented thoughts intertwine with the environment and invite users to reflect anew on history and the present.
The app merges modern digital technologies such as augmented reality, AI-supported language and image transformation with a feminist artistic practice that questions traditional concepts of space, time, and memory. The installation draws inspiration from philosophical concepts that understand time as layering—such as Henri Bergson, who describes art as a space for the unfolding of new realities: “Art is not a reflection of reality but a space for the unfolding of new realities.” Another key philosophical insight comes from David Lewis, who views time as a layered fabric where different times can coexist simultaneously: “Time is not a linear sequence bu