The installation that explores the intersection of personal memory, banality, and the subconscious through automatic writing and drawing. By reflecting on everyday routines, such as taking out the trash, buying groceries, paying taxes. It questions whether these acts are truly insignificant or serve as silent markers of contemporary existence.
Emerging from a desire to move beyond traditional illustrative practices, the installation juxtaposes text and image in a dynamic spatial composition. It begins with three core panels, each embodying deeply personal yet universally resonant themes: family and care, faith and authority, and home and origin. These anchors spark a growing network of drawings and texts, interweaving childhood memories, subconscious reflections, and observations of daily life.
As the network expands, new relationships between words and images emerge, forming a fragmented yet cohesive self-portrait, one that does not present a fixed identity but instead negotiates experience and perception in real time. Arranged within the gallery space, these elements transform the location into an externalized mind-map, where spontaneous connections continuously generate new layers of meaning.

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