An assemblage of ordinary cardboard boxes glows, repurposed into an unconventional and sculptural canvas. This video installation utilises projection mapping to precisely cast a moving image across the uneven surfaces of the boxes, which are arranged in a simple grid. The projected content has the nostalgic, low-fidelity quality of old home videos.
 While a single, coherent scene is being projected, it is physically broken apart by the architecture of the boxes. This fragmentation forces the viewer to mentally stitch the narrative together, creating a powerful metaphor for how we recall memories—not as a seamless film, but as disjointed, repeating, and imperfect fragments. The use of humble cardboard contrasts with the digital technology, grounding the ethereal nature of the memory in a tangible, everyday, and disposable material.

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