Haus of Perestroika, 2016 (30 hours)

A durational performance and installation, Haus of Perestroika reimagines the architecture of survival in a world shaped by instability and technological control. Over 30 hours across 5 days, the work unfolds as a physical meditation on the fear of homelessness—emotional, political, and literal.

Using sensual materials, scale distortion, and the rhythm of a living body, the piece straddles the line between play and peril. The human form becomes a fragile architecture within a system that no longer centres it. Displaced and exposed, it calls into question what it means to inhabit a space—when permanence is a myth and the future a negotiation.

Performed as both endurance and offering, Haus of Perestroika invites viewers to witness a body outmoded yet persistent, resisting erasure while navigating a world of shifting structures and uncertain refuge.

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