I am a researcher in cosmotechnics, working at the intersection of cosmology, technology, and visual culture. My practice unfolds across three dimensions: theoretical research, artistic production, and technological R&D. These are not separate fields. They operate as a single system. I study how images, from miniature paintings to neural networks, give structure to thought, color, and space. I develop this work through experiments in digital arts. I produce immersive works using machine learning, simulation, and augmented reality, extending historical pictorial traditions into computational forms. Across these works, I trace relations between particles and galaxies. In my work, pigments become pixels, and images become models of the universe.
This practice takes the form of research and development projects in partnership with institutions such as the French Ministry of Culture, the Castle of Chaumont-sur-Loire, and the Paris-Belleville School of Architecture. It has been developed through residencies at the Villa Medici in Rome, the Giorgio Cini Foundation in Venice, and the French Palace in Istanbul. It also draws on research on illustrated manuscripts at institutions including the Vatican Apostolic Archive and Topkapı Palace. I was awarded the Daniel Arasse Prize by the French Academy and the French School of Rome.
I graduated from the Paris-Malaquais School of Architecture (2016) and received my PhD at University of Gustave Eiffel (2025), in joint supervision with Tongji University in Shanghai. Since 2019, I have co-led the master’s seminar Cities in Mirror at the Paris-Belleville School of Architecture with Cristiana Mazzoni. Between 2022-2023, I also taught as a guest lecturer at the International Academy of Art in Dalian, China. My early work took place in Japan, China, and South Korea, in the offices of architects such as Kazuyo Sejima, Kengo Kuma, Jean Son, and Wang Shu. I have also worked with the French Ministry of Culture on national research strategy in architecture, and contributed to the development of international partnerships at the Paris-Belleville School of Architecture.
Paris, 2026.