Traverse Form began as a hand-shaped piece of ice illuminated with carefully controlled colored lighting. The resulting image emphasizes the fluid relationship between solid form and light, revealing contours, internal textures, and subtle transitions hidden within the frozen surface.
The sculptural shape appears both organic and unfamiliar, suggesting growth, movement, and transformation rather than a fixed subject. Green and amber illumination pass through the translucent ice, creating shifting layers of color that accentuate the form’s rounded protrusions and flowing geometry. The image explores how light can redefine frozen water, turning a simple sculpted object into an abstract study of structure, transparency, and visual rhythm.
Rather than documenting ice itself, Traverse Form investigates the boundary between sculpture, photography, and abstraction, where color and form combine to create an image that feels simultaneously natural and otherworldly.