This body of work unfolds within the fragile space between three generations: grandmother, mother, and daughter. Seen through the granddaughter’s lens, the images trace modulating terrains of perception, inheritance, and faith.
After forty years apart, the mother and grandmother live together again under the same roof. The project began with the return of the youngest member of the family from abroad when for the first time all three women were reunited in Athens.
Though bound by family ties, each follows her own trajectory, shaped by experience, conviction, and inherited ways of seeing. What appears as connection gradually reveals itself as projection, sustained by a persistent need for recognition and approval.
The work observes the subtle fluctuations in intimacy. Roles appear defined by age yet remain unstable. The daughter, the mother, and the grandmother, each occupy and resist the positions assigned to them. Care circulates without settling; it becomes unclear who nurtures and who seeks to be nurtured, where certainty begins, and where it dissolves.
Misunderstanding is not conflict, but condition.
Within this matriarchal structure, emotional patterns reverberate across generations. Time appears to unfold non-linearly as gestures, tensions, and remembered roles repeat themselves. At its core, the work asks whether, in resisting what formed us, we inevitably begin to reproduce it.

















