Through the presence of a small animal, this work repositions the center of perception
away from the human as a fixed point of reference.
Situated across both urban and natural environments, the subject is not presented as a
symbol or narrative device, but as an autonomous presence that engages space through
shifts in scale, distance, and orientation.
By recalibrating the relationship between body and environment, the images articulate a
perceptual field in which no single center dominates.
Within this field, scale no longer determines hierarchy, and spatial perception unfolds
beyond human-centered frameworks.
Rather than establishing an opposition between human and non-human, the work operates
through displacement, allowing multiple positions of perception to coexist within a shared
spatial condition.