IN-TRANSIT: Journeys Across Borders and Within
I exist in an in-between space—an “in-transit” state that shapes both my personal and artistic life. Moving between Thailand, my birthplace, and the United States, my adopted home, I navigate a continuous state of transition across physical, emotional, and psychological borders.
This body of work explores the complexities of belonging and displacement, where identity is not fixed but constantly negotiated. While borders such as visas and national boundaries define movement externally, it is the internal shifts, the fragmentation, adaptation, and reconstruction of self, that prove most challenging.
Through projects including The In-Between, Diaspora, and Rights of Passage, I examine how systems of migration and mobility shape lived experience. Portraiture, installation, and image-based objects are used to reflect the tension between individuality and the structures that define access, identity, and freedom.
The concept of “home” emerges as fluid and unstable, something carried, remembered, and continuously redefined rather than tied to a single place. These works do not offer resolution, but instead hold space for contradiction: where homesickness and belonging coexist, and where identity exists across multiple geographies at once.
Rather than presenting fixed narratives, In-Transit invites viewers to reflect on their own position within movement, memory, and belonging, and to consider the shared human experience of living between worlds.
“So, here you are, too foreign for home, too foreign for here, never enough for both. ”