This work investigates transformation as a state of becoming rather than completion. Formed by hand through the coiling technique, the vessel began with the familiarity of a vase, only to be disrupted through acts of pressure, distortion, and fracture. The resulting surface carries both intentional marks and accidental ruptures, situating the piece between control and unpredictability.
The vessel operates as a record of time: scratches and fissures accumulate like the traces of daily existence, mapping the persistence of lived experience onto matter. The glaze, shifting between matte opacity and glossy fluidity, enhances this instability, suggesting that nothing in the everyday remains static.
In this sense, Metamorphoses of Everyday Life becomes less an object and more a process — a shifting material body that resists resolution. It embodies fragility and resilience simultaneously, offering a tactile language for the uncertainty that defines both art and life.