A human being is not whole.
Never has been.
They are a body assembling itself while falling apart.
This exhibition approaches the human figure not as an external anatomical given, but as a projection of internal conflicts—a dynamic mechanism in which psychological processes precede and shape form. The body is conceived as a field of tensions between competing layers, where identity is constructed in a state of constant displacement.
Self-observation is a central theme: the human is presented as a system of imperfect connections—a structure that never reaches final completion while observing its own construction.
The exhibition does not offer singular interpretations, but instead creates a field of experience in which perception gradually becomes aware of its own instability.
“Mechanics of the Internal” affirms the understanding of the human being as a process—a transient configuration of states, rather than a stable, closed whole. In this sense, the works function as visual models of consciousness in a simultaneous state of construction and disintegration.