What Moves Me Through
This wall installation emerges from an ongoing observation of the Tyrrhenian Sea surrounding Naples, Italy, as a field of movement. Rather than approaching it as landscape, I am drawn to the transient marks produced by motion—traces that appear, shift, and dissolve as the surface is displaced.
What matters is not the image of water, but the moment in which movement inscribes itself. Lines emerge, fragment, and reform, shaped by forces that are both mechanical and organic. They never fully settle, continuing to shift.
Using a sepia pen, I translate these conditions through accumulations of gestural marks. Some lines extend and hold, while others dissolve almost immediately. Through this process, the marks begin to circulate, suggesting movement and space, and a quiet rhythm takes hold. Across the wall, form is not constructed, but allowed to surface.
