Description
Chaos and Order examines the tension between instability and structure through a carefully constructed spatial system. Spherical forms are arranged within a geometric grid that appears precise and deliberate, while fractured surfaces and broken planes interrupt the composition, suggesting forces that resist control.
The grid functions as a stabilizing framework—an imposed order—while the surrounding disruptions introduce unpredictability and entropy. These opposing elements coexist, neither dominating the other, reflecting the natural balance found in physical systems, mathematics, and human experience.
By placing this interaction within a vast, atmospheric landscape, the work expands beyond abstraction alone. The terrain implies time, erosion, and pressure—processes that continuously reshape structured systems. Chaos and Order ultimately proposes that equilibrium is not the absence of disorder, but the ongoing negotiation between the two.






