Movement I - The Event Horizon
Loss Of Reference
Compression Field
Initial Collapse
Gravitational Drift
Event Horizon
Movement II - The Interior Cavern
Enclosure
Recursive Pressure
Fault Line
Interior Density
Closed System
Movement III - The Reprogramming
Fracture
Inversion
Signal Interference
Structural Scan
Reorientation Field
Alignment Attempt
Movement IV - The Coherent Vessel
Load-Bearing Surface
Containment
Stabilised Interior
Residual Void
Coherent Vessel
Singularity
Continuation
Coherence Singularity is a photographic series exploring the reconstruction of identity following psychological collapse. Comprising twenty-three abstract works, the project translates internal states—disorientation, anxiety, self-depreciation, and extreme loneliness—into physical structures rather than representational scenes.
The work is built around the idea of coherence not as emotional resolution, but as functionality: the ability to form a structure capable of holding instability without collapsing into it. The title refers to a singularity as a point where previous systems fail and a new internal logic must be constructed.
Across the series, forms collapse, repeat, invert, and reassemble. Void, pressure, and orientation act as primary visual forces. Eclipse-like structures recur with subtle variations, reflecting the way internal patterns return during recovery—not as identical repetitions, but as evolving systems that gradually acquire new meaning.
Light is treated not as revelation but as instrument. Directional beams, scans, and surfaces suggest acts of agency, while dense textures function as load-bearing elements rather than decoration. Darkness remains present throughout the work, shifting from destabilising force to framed interior.
Rather than presenting recovery as cure or transcendence, Coherence Singularity frames it as architectural labour: the slow construction of a functional internal structure. The final images do not erase the void; they contain it. Identity emerges not as something restored to a previous state, but as something newly assembled—coherent, resilient, and able to continue.