The exhibition "Folding The Sea Into Dresses That Dissolve Like Salt" explores the rhythm of coexistence—of finding freedom while staying connected, of touch that transcends boundaries. Meaning is not anchored in fixed destinations but emerges through relationships, movements, and a shared pulse.

Inspired by the compass metaphor in John Donne’s “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning,” the exhibition describes a movement that expands outward while one foot remains firmly planted. In Donne’s poem, the compass symbolizes two lovers bound together despite physical distance, and here it similarly represents one side rooted while the other explores the world. It speaks of an experience seeking not direction but rhythm; like the invisible yet unbreakable bond between two lovers, the movement in the exhibition stays true to its center even as it stretches outward. This approach mirrors the island itself. Leros is at once solid ground and shifting rhythm. The island’s edges stretch with the sea, the wind, and memory, forming a fragmented yet interconnected narrative.