The Architecture of Identity: A Theoretical Framework for Cultural Research is a theoretical research publication that develops Identity as one of the four fundamental architectures established within The Architecture of Humanity research program. Drawing upon Systems Theory, Systemic Abstraction, artistic research, and interdisciplinary humanities scholarship, the publication proposes that identity is not a fixed attribute or inherited condition but a dynamic architecture of relationships through which individuals and societies organize belonging, continuity, and collective existence. Rather than approaching identity through isolated categories such as nationality, ethnicity, language, or culture, the framework examines the relational processes through which identity is formed, maintained, negotiated, and transformed across multiple scales of human organization. The study investigates identity from the individual to the family, community, nation, civilization, and humanity as a whole, demonstrating how identity continuously interacts with the complementary architectures of Belief, Conflict, and Power. Within this systems-based perspective, identity is understood as an evolving organizational structure whose coherence emerges through relationships rather than fixed classifications. The publication further positions Divine DNA (2016) as the principal artistic investigation of this framework. Through artistic research and Systemic Abstraction, the artwork is examined as a conceptual model that investigates identity as an interconnected visual system rather than as a representation of cultural diversity. This approach positions painting as a research methodology capable of exploring complex human systems through visual organization. As the fourth publication in the El Arte Monumental Research Series, The Architecture of Identity establishes the theoretical foundation for future research into identity as a structural component of human civilization while contributing to contemporary discussions in artistic research, systems theory, cultural studies, identity studies, and interdisciplinary humanities. It forms part of the broader Architecture of Humanity research program, which investigates Identity, Belief, Conflict, and Power as the fundamental architectures through which human societies organize collective existence.
Daniel Varzari (Thu,) studied this question.