|  |  | What  we thought was a wall turned out to be a curtain. And the converse was also  true: the wall disappeared but a stronger wall remained, the one that exists in  our minds – a transparent veil you can’t see through, the wall that turns into  a curtain, the curtain that is sewn shut on both sides. Among the questions I  asked myself in this piece were, how much can one really see of the other side,  and how much of this is what one wants to see? Can I face my image of the other  side being destroyed, or do I still think I can build my own home anywhere I  start working and creating things around me? Will creating things this way  help? Or is it just a form of escape - of creating my own miniature world and  seeing everything in its terms? This work deals with the human body placed in  new surroundings, and the relation of human beings to their lived space. It is  concerned with how human beings change their surroundings to suit themselves,  with what happens to them during this process, and how the body itself changes  and becomes influenced by its surroundings.
 To  approach this theme, I put it in the context of Eastern and Western   Europe, and of what happened when the old borders disappeared and  the new ones emerged. To me, the east – west metaphor stands for how we tend to  perceive the world only from our own viewpoint, and try to fit everything we  see and experience into our pattern of thinking. Meanwhile, each side changes  constantly and dramatically over very short periods of time, be it in respect  of people, architecture or their respective social and political situations. This  form of this installation showed coexistence of order and chaos, the façade and  what is hidden behind it, the orderliness and the mess. The wooden  constructions demonstrated both these energies and the tension between them. |