dreamer – a process that refuses to be closed
It started with a quiet sketch.
Drawn in pencil, with no clear plan. A bent figure, and above it something between a thought and a form – abstract shapes that felt more than they explained. I left it in a notebook. But it kept coming back.
Now I’m the one coming back.
Not to “finish” the work.
But to leave it open for a little longer.
✦ What’s happening?
I scanned the sketch. I redrew it digitally – not too precisely.
Then I added color. Pencil strokes, each shape different, like a container for a feeling.
Between those “thoughts,” I placed images: fragments of what someone might dream of.
Love. Loneliness. A beach. A microphone. A clock. An empty road.
No labels.
No guidance.
Interpretation is part of the process.
✦ What stays open?
I left blank spaces — with soft textures, like real paper.
One day, someone might write something there.
A sentence. A date. Maybe nothing.
You don’t have to explain it.
✦ Why am I doing this?
Because not every piece needs to be finished to be real.
Because a dreamer is not just someone who dreams —
but someone who lets themselves dream, even without knowing where it leads.
This is not a finished work.
But something’s already moving inside it.
And maybe that’s exactly the point.


