X-Y-Plotter 3 on-going studies:
Studies for Grass-Hopper code for vectors

Study for Grasshopper, 2025, XY Plotter drawing, archival-ink pen, 14”/20”Research in progress together with Yonatan Hopp, Grasshopper definition for converting bitmap to vector data and its dimentional possibilities.


Tell Me About Your Sleep



당신의 잠에 대해 말해줘
Tell Me About Your Sleep
Tell Me About Your Sleep is an evolving archive that navigates the delicate balance between creative practice and maternal experience, featuring the voices of 20 North American mother artists and scholars since its inception in 2022.
This publication, Tell Me About Your Sleep, highlights the artists’ experiences of “mothering”—the act of becoming and being a mother—through social, cultural, and political frameworks. This socially engaged art project aims to elevate and legitimize the perspectives of mother artists within contemporary discourse.
The collective’s first theme, “sleep,” is explored through a range of lenses, reflecting how the sleep of mothers and children becomes deeply intertwined—sometimes resulting in exhaustion or disorientation, other times producing surreal and transformative states. Through installation, video, photography, and text-based archives, the work examines how caregiving, creative work, and labor intersect. It will culminate in a roundtable discussion featuring mother artists and scholars currently working in Korea.
Kinderstube
Kinderstaube studies, 2025 XY-Plotter, Archival ink pens on varied papersKinderstube is a German word referring to how someone was raised by their parents, implying discipline and politeness. This is a visual study of objects from my home, an embroidery ‘Sampler’, a book that I keep. As I trace, I process how this early twentieth-century German culture was maintained in my parents’ childhood in Israel—as a strongly protected bubble of their parents. I explore how my mother’s childhood, and her mental commitment to hold tight to her parents’ world from vanishing, seeped into my own. It is a test to my imagined responsibility of guard this falling apart textile, particularly after immigrating myself. The question becomes: Am I
continuing my family European nomadic notion? Whereas the only exception is my parents who stayed for more then one generation in Israel.





