"ART PROJECT"
"LATEST NOTE"
"We spent three hours yesterday not making anything."
Just walking through what we'd made so far, trying to understand what it was. Not in an "analytical"way — more like trying to see it from outside ourselves. What would someone who didn't know us see?
The answer was: probably nothing coherent. And that felt right. The "COHERENCE"isn't in the individual pieces, it's in the practice. In the fact that we keep showing up.
Maybe that's what "COLLABORATION" actually is. Not two people making one thing together, but two people making their own things in the same room, and letting the proximity change what emerges.
"ORIGIN"
"It started with a question neither of us could answer alone."
What happens when you stop trying to make something "finished"?
When you let the work stay open?
One brought "STRUCTURE".
One brought "CHAOS".
Neither knew which was which.
We didn't "plan" this.
We didn't "pitch" it.
We just started making things and decided not to stop.
— JANUARY 2026 / THE "BEGINNING"
"WORKS"
"ABOUT"
"ART PROJECT" is an ongoing collaboration between two artists.
What started as a conversation became an "experiment". The experiment became a "practice". The practice became this — an evolving body of work with no fixed endpoint.
We work across mediums. Sometimes together in the same room, sometimes months apart. The project absorbs whatever we bring to it: drawings, code, photographs, text, sound, objects, ideas half-formed. Nothing is rejected. Everything is "MATERIAL".
"THE SPACE BETWEEN"
There's a place in every collaboration that belongs to neither person. A "THIRD TERRITORY" that emerges from the overlap.
We don't try to name it or claim it. We just notice when we're there — when something appears that neither of us could have made alone.
"PROCESS"
We don't "schedule" sessions. We don't set "agendas".
One of us starts something and leaves it where the other can find it. Days pass. Weeks sometimes. Then a response appears — not a continuation, exactly, but a "REACTION". A conversation in slow motion.
The work accumulates like sediment, layer by layer, until something takes shape that neither of us planned.