Daily routines are our anchors within society. They both ground and orient each of us within the built environment; while simultaneously, they fade from our operational awareness, disappearing into the white noise of the everyday.

Yet what if we were able to see outside of this dynamic so that our patterns and movements became apparent on a scale beyond our typical point of view? My current work represents an ongoing investigation and application of rhythmanalysis to uncover the social formation of human movement and what movement can inform us about the formation of the social.

Rhythms (moments) are collected by surveillance video tools, analyzed and rendered from physical reality into videos that generate distinctive patterns from the dialogue amongst the perceived, the conceived and the lived using customized code within the open source Processing platform.

Through technological mediation, the socio-spatial codes that our collective relations create, perpetuate, and thus intimately exist within are abstracted to contextualize the vistas of shifting relations between the social body and social space. The objective is to illicit new perspectives for viewing beyond the familiar towards that which is formless, waiting to be seen by each of us through internal reconciliation of what we expect and what we don't comprehend.

To accentuate these social rhythms is to initiate dialogue between the patterns we exist within and the constructs that contain them, to emulate the relations prevalent within social space. A situation that locates the viewer in a position to reengage with her surrounding environment, her rhythms, and their reverberations in order to better understand her role within the production of the social landscape.