




What makes a place feel like home? Is it the structure of a house, or the memories, emotions, and relationships connected to it? This work explores the meaning of home through personal stories shared by elderly individuals. Their perspectives reveal four recurring elements: objects, time, place, and people. Together, these stories form a puzzle. A line that gradually becomes visible: home begins within yourself and is shaped by your time. But time is not something tangible. What you see is different from what someone else sees. To visualize that, the mirror has been literally taken apart: glass, reflective layer, and backing. Space emerges between these elements. Time becomes visible as in-between space. No perfect reflection, but a series of variations. Shapes, colors, positions all possible versions of you. And when everything is exactly where it belongs to you, you find your home with, and in, time. This research was expressed in the form of an exhibition proposal.