After my performance “Destroy & Love” which took
me mostly 1 hour, where I tried to fix and glue
back the shards I figured out that things that broke,
relationships, friendships, political missteps even a
broken vase could give you the opportunity to trans-
form it into something different. Something new.
It may show you a more beautiful and everlasting
way of a perspective you wouldn’t have if it wouldn’t
break. In Japan, broken objects are often repaired
with Gold. The flaws are seen as a unique piece of
the object’s history, which adds to its beauty.
I compare it with human beings and life in general.
Everything broken is not necessarily the end
of something, it is a chance to redirect the purpose.
In my work, I try to capture the idea that pain and
suffrage can inspire learning and growth. I have
transformed shattered glass using cement and wood
into a new creation. Today, more than ever, the message of individualistic expressionism is highly relevant. Studying fine arts was an extremely intense experience for me.
In today’s changing economy, evolving understand-
ing of art and new ways of approach it is important
to use art as a communicative tool for changing.
It is all about the changes that happen all around us and
our own ability to change something. y vision could
be compared with Michelangelo Pistoletto’s one: art-
ists have the mission to change the world. I don’t
wanna just sit there and reflect on the world- I wanna
be a part of the change. I love changes.