Lumina is a series of three works that examine light as a material in flux—something that is not fixed, but continuously shaped by surface, reflection, and environment.
Across the works, light moves between states of warmth, fluidity, and absence. It is fragmented, layered, and partially concealed, emerging differently depending on proximity, movement, and time.
Rather than depicting light, the works allow it to behave—casting reflection, forming shadow, and shifting in response to changing conditions within a space. Each piece exists as a system of surface and atmosphere, where perception is never static.