The project offers an opportunity to look at the world, engage with it, and detach from it simultaneously. It allows one to accept personal experience’s scar and see its beauty and uniqueness.
It is an attempt to look at the personal trauma or a world catastrophe similar to how the Ocean looks at the Moon. The only material component of the project is the deepest, flesh-colored red floor.
The "object" of the installation is not the object but the environment itself and the duration of the viewer’s presence. Instead of objects, there is transparent glass and light. The light reveals the scars on the once-perfect transparent surface, extending the uniqueness of the damaged object to the entire space. Light reveals the essence and, at the same time, points to the illusion. Should we accept these illusions or seek the path to truth?
You can see a tear. It is an illusion. It’s not a tear. It is a circle. Eternal repetition and a symbol of the whole. The relationship between the Ocean and the Moon. Exploring the synergies between them. The phases of the cycle.
Tears heal the wound. So does time.