Inspired by Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo, The Crowd 2 examines the urban crowd as a dynamic field of intersecting trajectories.
Individual movements briefly align, overlap, and disperse, forming a continuously shifting spatial and perceptual structure.
The layered surface does not depict the crowd as a fixed image, but registers fluctuation between presence and absence, stability and dissolution.
The work is part of an ongoing inquiry into how time and perception operate across collective conditions within urban space.