Nest is a suspended textile sculpture balanced by the weight of a stone. Hanging on an almost invisible fishing line, it slowly rotates in space, making movement an essential part of the work. The piece exists in a state of delicate equilibrium, shaped by gravity, tension, and constant adjustment.
Built through a repetitive process of winding and layering textile material around an empty center, the form appears both organic and constructed. The void at its core is as important as the material itself, giving shape to something that is defined as much by absence as by presence.
Projected footage filmed from moving trains creates a shifting backdrop of passing landscapes. While the projection moves forward through space, the sculpture turns in place, bringing together two different experiences of movement: travel and stillness, drift and anchoring.
Through this simple interaction, Nest reflects on balance, belonging, and the ways we orient ourselves within a world that is constantly in motion.