Studies on trajectories is a collection of visual explorations of the paths left behind by matter shapeshifting from one body to another on Earth. It is part of a larger art-science research about the indeterminate nature of matter, and the apparent differences between living and inert matter, its forms, the elemental particles that build it, the different trajectories of the chemical elements, their relations, communications, and behaviors. In this case, the state of matter changes from solid matter into liquid matter, leaving behind a trace, visible due to the use of colored carbon ink. With the involvement of temperature, atmospheric pressure, and time, these molecules later transform into gas as part of the air.
Through an un-disciplined approximation of art and physics, it is possible to recognize the queer nature of matter, and the necessity to look beyond western systems and taxonomies to acknowledge its existence. The spherical forms of the ice allude to complex ways of investigating matter, inspired by soft matter physics, imagining it as an assembly of spheres moving together, connecting to each other in an infinite number of ways, carrying different information that builds the world.