What remains of us when we are no longer there? When the body disappears, do our choices still communicate something about who we are? This work begins from that question, exploring how identity can still be sensed through what is left behind. In familiar, everyday situations, presence is suggested without being shown. What feels deeply personal becomes something shared — a reflection of routines, habits, and the subtle ways we define ourselves through what we wear.
Even without a visible body, intention and action are still implied. There are traces of posture, movement, and gesture that allow us to understand what is happening and to imagine the person who is not there. The images reflect on how clothing and objects act as extensions of identity, absorbing everyday actions and experiences. Within a world shaped by constant consumption and rapid change, what we wear does more than cover us — it communicates, represents, and helps construct how we are perceived.
Between what is present and what is missing, the work invites us to reflect on what truly makes someone a person. If identity can still be recognized through absence, where does personhood actually reside — in the body, in action, or in the traces we leave behind? Rather than offering answers, the experience opens a space for reflection, moving from a sense of unease toward a quiet recognition of connection in what remains.