My work “Internal Monolith” considers the mind as a site of both creation and destruction, where memories are formed, fears emerge, and imagination develops. I am interested in the ways thoughts and emotions intersect, contradict, and evolve over time. Through the use of fragmented elements, repeated forms, and layered marks, I explore the instability of selfhood and the tension between unity and fracture. These images are intended to reflect the internal dialogues we all experience, highlighting the dynamic between clarity and confusion, as well as control and collapse. I have a deep curiosity about identity and the inner worlds each of us carries. I am particularly interested in what lies beneath the surface: what we hide, what we protect, and the multiple versions of ourselves that coexist within a single body.