When you look Inside you, what do you see? In this state of reflection, you allow your thoughts to arise naturally. Memories, ideas, and emotions come forward, like waves gently lapping at the shore. Some are fleeting, while others linger, asking for your attention. You observe them with curiosity and compassion, recognizing them as parts of yourself that have their own place and meaning. You might revisit past experiences, considering them with the wisdom you’ve gained over time. Or perhaps you explore your current emotions, seeking to understand their roots and what they’re trying to tell you. As you reflect, you may encounter both light and shadow within yourself, the joys and the sorrows, the strengths and the vulnerabilities. In this reflective state, you might find a sense of deeper purpose or direction, as you continue to reflect and grow.
The objects, cut into parts with their inner covered by mirrors, show us a way to stay connected to ourselves in a world that often pulls us outward. Mirrors have been of great cultural and art historical significance for centuries: from self-contemplation, the image of the soul, to the motif of transience or the transitions of real worlds into magical parallel universes. Mirrors allow the artist a variety of imaginary reflections; they can reveal hidden realities. They represent the duality of light and shadow, conscious and unconscious, truth and illusion, inner and outer worlds. They invite us to look not only at the surface but to peer deeper into the reflections of our own inner worlds, revealing the many layers of who we are and what we see.