pattern study





Tiny Dreams explores the invisible architectures that exist beneath ordinary perception. Inspired by microscopic organisms, insect structures, cellular formations, and biological repetition, these studies investigate how simple geometric systems can begin to feel alive through rhythm, density, distortion, and motion.
Rather than directly illustrating creatures, the forms operate as perceptual translations of micro-life — oscillating between organism, signal, vibration, and spatial event. As patterns compress, tilt, repeat, and dissolve, they begin to mimic the unstable logic of living systems observed under magnification.
The project asks what happens when the player enters a world beneath human scale: a dreamlike micro-environment where perception replaces orientation, and where movement, rhythm, and atmosphere become the primary language of navigation.
The visual studies function as early spatial organisms for the VR world — part creature, part architecture, part optical illusion. Existing somewhere between biological structure and abstract motion system, they aim to evoke the uncanny feeling of witnessing life at a scale normally inaccessible to the human body.