Disorders is a collection of six unique works, Bipolar, Dementia, Phobia, Borderline, Delirium, and Schizophrenia. The series explores mental states through the aesthetics of repetition, looping structures, and computational simulation.
Drawing on 3D modeling and simulation techniques, the collection constructs visual systems governed by cyclical movement and self-reinforcing dynamics. Rather than illustrating specific symptoms, the works translate psychological rhythms into structural behavior. Loops function not merely as formal devices but as conceptual frameworks: patterns that repeat, intensify, fragment, and reassemble. Across the series, recurrence becomes a central visual principle. Cycles of attack and retreat, tension and release, suspension and relapse are articulated through motion systems that resist linear progression. The works emphasize persistence and containment ; visual architectures that appear unable to escape their own internal logic. Each piece operates within a closed circuit, where disruption seems possible yet remains perpetually deferred.
Within Disorders, computational repetition mirrors the experiential repetition often associated with mental distress. The simulation environment becomes a metaphorical space where thought patterns materialize as kinetic structures. What unfolds on screen is not narrative, but rhythm — a continuous oscillation between rupture and return. Through disciplined visual systems and constrained formal vocabularies, the collection reflects on confinement not as a static condition, but as a dynamic loop — a state sustained by its own motion.