Resonance Recorded As Structure
photography + pure physics
Alexander James Hamilton’s Cymatic Water + Light series explores the relationship between resonance physics, liquid and light, producing analogue photographs constructed through the physical interaction of frequency, vibration and optical distortion. The resulting works reveal structures that appear improbable in their formation, yet emerge entirely through material process.
Using cymatic wave behaviour as both subject and mechanism, Hamilton investigates parallels between liquid resonance and the hidden forces that organise the physical world. Water functions not simply as subject matter, but as an active optical medium. As Hamilton describes the process, “the water acts as a mobile and fluid lens, allowing me to choose where and how the light should fall onto the subject.” What becomes visible is not an illustration of energy, but its temporary registration as form.
Constructed entirely within the studio and resolved directly onto analogue film, each work records interactions between resonance, surface tension and light without digital manipulation. The resulting images oscillate between abstraction, cosmology and material physics, occupying an unstable territory between photography, sculpture and scientific observation.
Hamilton describes this approach simply: “Resonance is recorded as structure.”
Writer and curator Paul Carey-Kent has described the works as reflections upon “our imperceptible universe: a symbol of the interrelation of beings on earth and in space, a heterogeneous immaterial architecture.”
Using cymatic wave behaviour as both subject and mechanism, Hamilton investigates parallels between liquid resonance and the hidden forces that organise the physical world. Water functions not simply as subject matter, but as an active optical medium. As Hamilton describes the process, “the water acts as a mobile and fluid lens, allowing me to choose where and how the light should fall onto the subject.” What becomes visible is not an illustration of energy, but its temporary registration as form.
Constructed entirely within the studio and resolved directly onto analogue film, each work records interactions between resonance, surface tension and light without digital manipulation. The resulting images oscillate between abstraction, cosmology and material physics, occupying an unstable territory between photography, sculpture and scientific observation.
Hamilton describes this approach simply: “Resonance is recorded as structure.”
Writer and curator Paul Carey-Kent has described the works as reflections upon “our imperceptible universe: a symbol of the interrelation of beings on earth and in space, a heterogeneous immaterial architecture.”
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photography, unique work
120 × 180 cms
47.2 × 70.8 inches
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