Under the Stone

It examines the psychological weight of learned silence. Shaped by repeated warnings of war and the normalization of everyday racism, silence became a survival strategy—enduring by ignoring what could not be changed. Rather than visible violence, the work addresses this quiet, continuous pressure and the habit of adaptation it creates. What first felt like personal exhaustion revealed itself as collective an emotional sediment beneath daily life. The stone becomes its metaphor: heavy and immovable, formed by accumulated fear and unresolved memory.
Exhibition view: Under the Stone, WRG SENSOR, 2025










Photo: Gloria May Berthold
Under the Stone

It examines the psychological weight of learned silence. Shaped by repeated warnings of war and the normalization of everyday racism, silence became a survival strategy—enduring by ignoring what could not be changed. Rather than visible violence, the work addresses this quiet, continuous pressure and the habit of adaptation it creates. What first felt like personal exhaustion revealed itself as collective an emotional sediment beneath daily life. The stone becomes its metaphor: heavy and immovable, formed by accumulated fear and unresolved memory.
Exhibition view: Under the Stone, WRG SENSOR, 2025









Photo: Gloria May Berthold