Light is never static — it moves, refracts, and transforms as it interacts with surfaces. In mirror, glass, and metal, this movement becomes visible: space folds, doubles, dissolves, and reappears. Reflection here is not mere repetition, but a continuous transformation of reality.
These materials exist on the threshold between solidity and immateriality. Glass suspends light in tension, mirrored planes reveal unexpected depths, and metal, whether polished, brushed, or patinated, records the passing world in subtle echoes. What seems fixed is contingent, changing with proximity, angle, and time.