A topological body (2025) is in installation commissioned by ISTA (Institute of Science and Technology). The work consists of 7 photographs and an AR sculpture (executed by Joshua Alena). Recurring objects visualizing the mathematical field of topology are reassembled in the sculpture.

Starting from selected areas of topology and their concrete applications in the research field of Herbert Edelsbrunner and Jan Maas at ISTA, for instance in the analysis of bone density, skull shapes, protein folding, or tooth geometry, I create photographs that translate these abstract concepts into visual expressions of the body.

The human applications of these mathematical models serve not merely as a starting point, but as an interface between body and space, and between biology and geometry. Beyond that, the photographs present the subject as loops, folds, cavities, and transitions, patterns that appear both within the human body and within mathematically conceived space.

The series is complemented by an organically inspired 3D sculpture that becomes visible through augmented reality. Topology, as a subject, is given physical form. In the spirit of Lygia Clark's "organic line," I understand this body as something open and permeable, a space "between things" that draws no boundaries but instead connects. The result is an artistic system in which mathematical notions of space, human form, and sculptural virtuality mutually interpenetrate.