WatchTower
Sculpture
Material: wood, sticks, cardboard box, knives, packing tape,
DVD player,7-inch TV, Stop-motion-loop
Size: 40 x 60 x 170cm
A playful work about stepping outside comfort to let something new grow. Through dialogue, dance, and curiosity, we explored how simple materials can become something precious—more fable than real. Part of the process is exposed, inviting the viewer into the making.
It began with an impulse, which we quickly followed. It combines photo, video, sculpture, poetry, and color. Sometimes things just click—like the perfect size of an unused mini-TV.
We went to the woods for sticks to build a tower’s frame. It was a mix of fun, focus, and reuse—turning the ordinary into something elevated. This headhouse holds memory, mystery, and familiar elements seen in unfamiliar ways. It was creative, challenging, and full of joy—a perfect day at work.
WatchTower
Sculpture
Material: wood, sticks, cardboard box, knives, packing tape, DVD player,7-inch TV, Stop-mo-loop
Size: 40 x 60 x 170cm
A playful work about stepping outside comfort to let something new grow. Through dialogue, dance, and curiosity, we explored how simple materials can become something precious—more fable than real. Part of the process is exposed, inviting the viewer into the making.
It began with an impulse, which we quickly followed. It combines photo, video, sculpture, poetry, and color. Sometimes things just click—like the perfect size of an unused mini-TV.
We went to the woods for sticks to build a tower’s frame. It was a mix of fun, focus, and reuse—turning the ordinary into something elevated. This headhouse holds memory, mystery, and familiar elements seen in unfamiliar ways. It was creative, challenging, and full of joy—a perfect day at work.
“For hundreds of years we have believed that if something is logical in observation, then logic should be enough to get the idea in the first place, but that’s complete rubbish”
— Edward de Bono
In reality, our thinking jumps between logic and imagination — facts collide with unpredictable currents, creating a kind of electro-chemical sludge. Anyway, why is lavender purple? I think I’ll have the tea now, you like to dance..?
— this is grasshopper thinking
“For hundreds of years we have believed that if something is logical in observation, then logic should be enough to get the idea in the first place, but that’s complete rubbish”
— Edward de Bono
In reality, our thinking jumps between logic and imagination — facts collide with unpredictable currents, creating a kind of electro-chemical sludge.
Anyway, why is lavender purple? I think I’ll have the tea now, you like to dance..?
— this is grasshopper thinking