Reflection on loss, transformation, and the unspoken fragility of the everyday. Household objects such as beds, chairs, and shower trays—once... Read More
Reflection on loss, transformation, and the unspoken fragility of the everyday. Household objects such as beds, chairs, and shower trays—once symbols of rest, stability, and routine—are reshaped and stripped of their usability. Their forms are broken, distorted, or rendered dysfunctional, denying the viewer their expected purpose.
Among the installations are also objects derived from the lived experiences of people with disabilities—wheelchairs, crutches, and assistive devices—likewise deformed and no longer fit for use. These interventions do not seek to provoke, but to gently confront. They invite reflection on how quickly function can vanish, and how deeply our sense of autonomy and comfort depends on fragile structures we rarely question—until they fail.
Rather than offering solutions, the exhibition creates space for discomfort, prompting an emotional and physical awareness of the limitations that may affect any of us—through age, accident, or circumstance.