Volume
Volume is an indoor light installation by 1024 architecture that explores the boundaries between digital abstraction and organic life. Designed as a luminous one-cubic-meter structure, the sculpture is composed of multiple vertical LED planes layered in space. These transparent sheets form a three-dimensional display surface where shifting patterns of light appear, evolve, and dissolve in real time.
Like a living organism, Volume breathes, vibrates, and pulses—its motion driven by custom software that generates continuous variations of form and rhythm. Drawing visual inspiration from medical imaging techniques such as CT scans or ultrasound diagnostics, the installation reveals the cross-sections of an invisible entity moving within its confined space. Viewers witness slices of an amorphous body emerge and vanish, as if decoding the internal anatomy of a digital being.
Volume is more than a sculpture; it is a living canvas that brings together the logics of spatial computing, kinetic art, and bio-inspired aesthetics. By transposing scientific imaging into the field of sensorial experience, the piece invites viewers to question what is alive, what is virtual, and how light itself can occupy space like a body.