A Study that examines the objects and rituals that quietly shaped a generation, preserving them like cultural fossils. Drawing from nostalgic snacks, childhood routines, and mass-produced comforts, the series reframes disposable domestic artifacts as archaeological evidence of contemporary life. Each work isolates familiar imagery and elevates it through scale, texture, and repetition, transforming ordinary consumables into relics worthy of study and preservation.
Through the lens of HAUS JURNEY’s archive-driven philosophy, DOMESTIC PALEONTOLOGY treats nostalgia not as sentimentality, but as material history: a record of domestic systems, shared experiences, and the manufactured landscapes that shaped an era.
Works: 05 of 05