Conceptual reflections, curatorial notes, and research fragments
The Body in Constructed Realities
This project investigates the body as a constructed and staged entity shaped by overlapping social, cultural, and psychological forces. It approaches identity not as something fixed or inherent, but as a condition that is continuously performed, fragmented, and reassembled within controlled visual environments.
Through painting and mixed media, I construct scenes in which the body becomes both subject and surface—simultaneously present and destabilized. These staged environments operate as sites of tension, where gestures, spatial arrangements, and material treatments expose the instability of representation and the fragility of perceived identity.
The work draws on a visual language that oscillates between figuration and abstraction, allowing forms to emerge, dissolve, and reconfigure. This shifting condition reflects the fluid nature of identity, shaped by external structures of control as well as internal psychological states. The body, in this context, is not merely depicted, but actively negotiated.
Rather than presenting a unified or resolved image, the works resist closure. They emphasize interruption, layering, and transformation, revealing identity as an ongoing process rather than a stable conclusion.
Ultimately, the project positions the body as a contested space—where visibility, control, and transformation intersect. It questions how identities are constructed, imposed, and performed, and invites a reconsideration of the boundaries between the self and its representations.
Fragmented Memory
Memory does not emerge as a fixed archive, but as a fragmented and unstable construction shaped by repetition, disappearance, and reconstruction. Through layered visual narratives, the work examines how personal and collective memories dissolve, mutate, and reappear within shifting contemporary realities. The image becomes a site where traces of presence and absence continuously intersect, revealing memory as an unfinished and constantly transforming condition.
Identity as Performance
Identity is approached not as a fixed essence, but as a performative and continuously shifting condition shaped by social structures, visual culture, and psychological tension. The figures within the work exist between revelation and concealment, constructing unstable selves that continuously negotiate visibility, fragmentation, and transformation. Through staged visual environments, the body becomes a site where identity is not simply represented, but repeatedly performed, interrupted, and reconstructed.
Curatorial Fragments
The body appears as an unstable archive suspended between visibility and disappearance.
Representation becomes a temporary construction rather than a fixed truth.
Memory survives through fragmentation, repetition, and transformation.