Archives demand responsibility.
Working on Tribenee meant understanding that archival material is not neutral. Every photograph, object, and testimony carries emotional weight. The challenge was to construct a narrative that preserved dignity while making absence perceptible.
Concept development required restraint. Instead of dramatizing loss, the exhibition was built through quiet accumulation — fragments of domestic life, oral memory, and spatial rhythm. Meaning emerged not from spectacle, but from proximity.
Tribenee taught me that communication is not only about amplification. Sometimes it is about creating conditions where silence can be heard.