





The Interior of Emotion ; An art and interior series exploring memory, isolation, and emotional release.
"The Interior of Emotion" is a spatial study that transforms personal memory into tactile form—a place where unresolved feelings, subconscious echoes, and emotional transitions are given a physical presence through materiality, light, and silence.
Rooted in the designer’s own personal narrative, the exhibition blurs the boundary between dream and reality. Inspired by a recurring dream that revisits themes of isolation, longing, and unspoken closure, this concept translates emotional residue into warm-toned timber textures, curved architectural lines, layered lighting, and interactive moments of self-reflection.
The gallery is arranged as a soft emotional arc: beginning with stillness and avoidance, flowing through confrontation, and ending in release. Visitors move through shadowed spaces, face questions projected onto plastered walls, write letters never meant to be sent, and find themselves in a coffee corner—a sanctuary to pause, reconnect, or let go.
This is not just an art space. It’s an invitation into the interior of the self—a place where feelings aren’t just felt, but designed.
The Interior of Emotion ; An art and interior series exploring memory, isolation, and emotional release.
"The Interior of Emotion" is a spatial study that transforms personal memory into tactile form—a place where unresolved feelings, subconscious echoes, and emotional transitions are given a physical presence through materiality, light, and silence.
Rooted in the designer’s own personal narrative, the exhibition blurs the boundary between dream and reality. Inspired by a recurring dream that revisits themes of isolation, longing, and unspoken closure, this concept translates emotional residue into warm-toned timber textures, curved architectural lines, layered lighting, and interactive moments of self-reflection.
The gallery is arranged as a soft emotional arc: beginning with stillness and avoidance, flowing through confrontation, and ending in release. Visitors move through shadowed spaces, face questions projected onto plastered walls, write letters never meant to be sent, and find themselves in a coffee corner—a sanctuary to pause, reconnect, or let go.
This is not just an art space. It’s an invitation into the interior of the self—a place where feelings aren’t just felt, but designed.