dynamic light statics is an audiovisual work that visualizes the tension between order and transformation, perception and data, through a single continuous line of light generated by an algorithmic reflection process in virtual three-dimensional space.
Within the work, a beam of light is reflected ten thousand times through simulated physical interactions. Each reflection point is determined by both algorithmic necessity and stochastic variation, producing a trajectory that is at once inevitable and unpredictable. The resulting line becomes a visual record of interlinked cause and chance.
Using a single dataset across all scenes, the work constructs a structure resembling a perceptual map unfolding in space. The network of vertices generated by reflection suggests how perception can emerge from within data itself.
Conceptually, dynamic light statics explores how immaterial information can transform into perceptual experience through recursive reflection. The work builds a system that simultaneously produces and observes its own data, visualizing a form that exists through the act of self-observation.
The title references statics not as a physical discipline but as a metaphor for equilibrium within motion. The work examines how apparent stillness can emerge from continuous transformation, and how stability can arise from internal dynamics rather than external control.