UNKNOWN FIELD is an ongoing independent exploration focused on the role of uncertainty within perception, knowledge, and artistic practice.

Across history, cultures have developed systems intended to stabilize reality — concepts, models, definitions, and images that allow the world to appear coherent and predictable. Yet these structures remain temporary. Beneath them persists a continuous field of indeterminacy: the unknown.

Rather than approaching the unknown as a problem to be solved, UNKNOWN FIELD treats it as a condition to be observed.

The project investigates moments in which meaning becomes unstable — where perception shifts, interpretations diverge, and familiar structures begin to dissolve. Through visual work, theoretical reflection, and experimental tools, the research explores how uncertainty operates within contemporary systems of knowledge, technology, and representation.

The aim is not to define the unknown, but to remain attentive to its presence.

UNKNOWN FIELD functions as an open framework where artistic practice and conceptual inquiry intersect, allowing space for fluctuation, ambiguity, and emergent forms of understanding.