My work explores how financial systems, algorithmic models, and digital matrices reshape human perception and societal structures. By translating economic data into sound and textile forms, I examine how abstract financial mechanisms infiltrate daily life, influencing individual behavior and global relationships.
The "CNY/USD" series and data-driven embroidery works investigate the role of economic frameworks in the era of computation, questioning how large-scale machine learning models and financial algorithms condition our understanding of value, labor, and identity.
In an era increasingly governed by artificial intelligence and predictive algorithms, my research examines the ways in which machine-learning models "train" and "domesticate" human behaviors. By translating economic abstractions into tactile and auditory structures, the work seeks to make visible the invisible infrastructures that dictate contemporary existence.