the eerie
2024
the eerie
2024


the eerie

The installation presents a collection of enigmatic forms—fragments that seem to belong to a larger whole, though their origin remains unknown. It functions as a space of speculation: the objects do not tell any specific story, but rather activate the potential for many. Their status is suspended—between discovery and projection, between archive and dream.
Situated within the current of posthumanist and speculative artistic practices, the installation breaks with linear narrative and anthropocentric understandings of form. The objects are not representations—they are rather affective points of contact, resonating with that which lies beyond language. In their ambiguity, they open a space for imagination that exceeds binary categories of knowledge: past/future, nature/culture, identity/otherness.
The work’s aesthetic evokes strategies of “the weird” and “the eerie”—concepts explored, among others, by theorists such as Mark Fisher and Timothy Morton. The objects resist classification, but through their unstable meanings, they generate tension—between presence and its simulation, between matter and meaning. It is within this tension that the potential for a new narrative emerges.
The installation does not so much represent as initiate a process: a process of interpretation that never truly ends. Each fragment—like an element of an abandoned system—becomes a site for the viewer’s own projection. In this sense, the work is not about memory, but about possibility—it opens a space in which things not yet told may come into being.






