Non-Assertive Presence describes practices that resist dominance, spectacle, or directive force. Rather than commanding attention, the work integrates quietly into space, allowing perception to settle and unfold without coercion.
Perception as Interface describes practices that activate through viewing conditions rather than fixed form. Movement, distance, duration, and light alter what is perceived, making vision an active instrument rather than a passive receiver. Structure unfolds through attention over time rather than presenting itself all at once.
Process as Form describes practices where method determines structure. Repetition, accumulation, or procedure becomes visible logic, allowing form to emerge through sustained action rather than compositional decision.