My installation practice draws deeply from the unnoticed poetry of household objects — bricks, scales, pots, measuring tapes, and other materials that fill our daily lives. These objects are not mere tools; they are silent witnesses to personal and collective histories, each carrying layers of social, cultural, and emotional significance.
Through my work, I explore how these everyday materials embody the lived experiences of a generation. A brick may speak of shelter and resilience; a pot, of nourishment and domestic rituals; a measuring tape, of aspirations, growth, and human endeavor. They carry traces of the people who touched, used, and depended on them — quietly telling stories of changing times, shifting values, and enduring human connections.
By recontextualizing these objects within an artistic space, I aim to reinterpret their meanings and amplify their expressive possibilities. I engage with their textures, forms, and inherent symbolism to evoke a new visual language — one that blurs the boundaries between the ordinary and the profound. The installations invite viewers to look closer, to reimagine, and to find new narratives in the familiar.
In a world increasingly detached from tangible, lived experiences, Echoes of Everyday Life acts as a bridge — reconnecting us to the simple yet profound artifacts of human existence.