What I’ve seen at the dawn

The authoritarianism of architecture and design in schools through the determination of physique and personality

What I’ve seen at the dawn, UV printed on acrylic (9 pieces), 2022

Exposing the architectural structure through the Installation art and connects people by experimenting with interactive art. Both are the proposition in this work. Exposing these structures reveals just how much the power of authoritarianism can manipulate us and able to absorb deeply as we cannot know ,Muscle memory. This has been working with us over a long and slow period. But it has been successful in respect, belief, and faith that affects the level of consciousness. Muscles that are accustomed to sitting, walking, bowing, bowing, and bowing. Automatically rises after a long training session. These are gestures of humility that the adults of Thai society appreciate and try to instill in every child this thing called ‘politeness’.

But those movements Reinforces us to be stuck with fear. Respect for authority over age and position when we stand to look at it from a distance. And as our trained muscles become weak, the reflection of our personality arrangement becomes even more pronounced. More and more questions about what happens to our own bodies arise. Walking in straight lines unnecessarily sitting down for no reason Kneeling begging for the unseen, a chair that never sits comfortably, but why do we still sit on it?

Project hosted by SAVE POINT Exhibition

Exhibition at Kinjai Contemporary, 29 Jan – 13 Feb 2022, Bangkok, Thailand

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