‘The waiting room’
When looking at a garment as a space, you see that, like in architectural design, there are many ways in which garments can be made more accessible. My relationship to clothes is shaped by my neurodiverse perception. I mute and extract information in order not to get overstimulated. I create static by fixating shapes and silhouettes as a contrast to my hyperactivity. I hyperfixate on subjects in my research, using my hyper awareness of surroundings to create environments that blur the line: where does a garment begin and a room end? For my graduation project, I take you to the waiting room. Not being able to negotiate time and dates, I am often too late to actually experience the waiting room. I asked AI to describe it to me. In my research I play into the irony of the many neurodiverse people waiting for treatment in a space they haven't yet learned to navigate. I use the archetypes present in the waiting room to guide you through the neurodiverse experience.
@vera.lelie
bepa.lelie@gmail.com
Photos Sanne Peper