Gloom In The Air

This work is a deeply personal response to a traumatic episode triggered by medical misdiagnosis. After undergoing an MRI scan, I was abruptly and irresponsibly informed by a doctor that I had a terminal illness with less than a year to live. What followed was a period of profound psychological disorientation—haunted by hallucinations, dread, and altered states of perception—until a reexamination by leading specialists later confirmed it had all been a mistake.
In contrast to conventional modes of visual order—flat surfaces, geometric lines, or monochromatic schemes—this series embraces experimental materials such as PVC, metallic mesh, synthetic fibers, and pleated fabrics. These elements extend from surface into space, creating twisted, spatial environments in strange, saturated colors. The forms are not ornamental but emotional: sculptural expressions of psychic rupture.

When life seemed to enter a countdown of 360 days—only to be restarted—the work began translating despair through vivid color, and confusion through tactile beauty. Beneath the surfaces, disorder unfolds: grief and fear do not follow logic. They burst loose, unbound, morphing constantly, invading every corner of daily life.