Three paintings visualize three pieces of music. Each painting is a frozen piece of sound — where melodies, harmonies, and rhythms are embodied through pictorial forms, colors, and composition. The time interval in which the music is performed is translated into a visual diagram on canvas, much like musical notes on a sheet — allowing us to perceive the entire piece at once.
By photographing the painting and animating its components, I transformed a static form into a dynamic one.
Music is born as a response — a sensation — and evokes emotion during perception. It is an intangible, invisible form of human expression. So what came first: the sound of a form, or the form of a sound? In this work, music is interpreted through abstract lines, compositional structure, and color schemes. This is about the mental perception of music and painting — when feelings and emotions interact with memory and experience, they spark associations that stimulate the subconscious. Reconstruction occurs when emotions awakened through perception give rise to new images and ideas — and from this, a new artwork is born.