The visor is an object of paradox. Designed as a threshold between body and world, it promises security while simultaneously enforcing distance. The visor appears in isolation—removed from the helmet, detached from the head, stripped of the very presence it was meant to defend.
What remains is a fragile shell, a surface without function, suspended between artifact and apparition. No longer a tool of protection, the visor reveals its own vulnerability. Its absence of context transforms it into something uncanny: a mask without a face, a frame without a subject.
The series thus invites reflection on the shifting relationship between subject and object. Once an accessory to embodiment, the visor now exists in a state of estrangement, severed from both purpose and intimacy. Its transparency no longer grants vision, but instead foregrounds the void it encloses—the emptiness of protection without proximity.






