Individuals who are curious about and question their existence and origins seek to find answers to this search through different methods. The development of self-awareness can be read, understood, and interpreted through various signs.
On the one hand, they are like young trees extending their roots deep into the earth in an attempt to reach the source of water; on the other, they stretch upward toward the highest points, driven by curiosity for the force of strong winds. They are not satisfied merely with what they see; rather, they activate all their senses in an effort to perceive, analyze, and understand. Very often, they also try to feel and experience things directly through their own bodies.
The common ground shared by this group—composed of individuals who seek to understand and make sense of themselves, their surroundings, and their roots—is a curiosity-driven mode of questioning, as well as an effort to come to know both the self and life through art. The way they develop their projects may be likened to first untying knots that have become tangled beyond recognition, and then transforming the loosened threads into works by weaving them stitch by stitch. At the same time, this process becomes a field of struggle with things that have turned into blind knots. As problem-solvers, they at times adopt a fictional, at times intuitive, and at times experimental mode of production. These problems may be personal or social in nature. By collectively expanding the weave, the group also creates the ground for establishing strong bonds with one another.
