Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3

'Display for New Language 1, 2, 3' is a media experiment and hardware research project designed to physically implement the character system of the 'New Language'—a stereoscopic language befitting the contemporary technological environment—within real space.

While previous works attempted stereoscopic realization in the auditory dimension through 'speech' and 'sound,' this work originates from the fundamental question: "How can floating, stereoscopic characters be visualized in physical space rather than on a 2D flat display?" To break away from the planarity of traditional rectangular screens, three circular band-shaped LED Matrix displays were fabricated; however, they are currently positioned separately rather than being integrated into a single complete stereoscopic structure. This separated form reveals the transitional state of the 'New Language,' which has not yet been fully realized within physical space. The three scattered circular displays act as fragmented strokes constituting stereoscopic characters, visually presenting the technical challenges and cross-sections of research encountered in the process of moving from 2D limits to 3D entry.

This hardware exploration transcends the mere creation of an output device; it is a process of creating a 'new vessel'—appropriate hardware capable of containing the new software called 'New Language.' Through its incompleteness, 'Display for New Language 1, 2, 3' proves the intense physical attempts and experiments themselves that characters confined in flat pixels must undergo to be liberated into three-dimensional space.

Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 0
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 0
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 0
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 0
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 0
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 1
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 2
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 3
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 4
Display for Newborn Language 1, 2, 3 - Image 5