Where is My Journey
Where Is My Journey
Where is My Journey is a diagrammatic moving image poem—an experimental composition that unfolds as a monological conversation with time, space, and memory. Through its fragmented editing and layered montage, the work opens fissures—temporal, visual, and aural—that disturb linear perception and raise questions about the personal experience of time and its residual traces. The work engages with the interplay between image and thought, proposing an intimate yet speculative mode of cinema. Drawing from Gilles Deleuze’s concept of the diagram, it investigates how montage can operate not simply as a technique of juxtaposition but as a spatial and mental construction—an active frame of becoming. At the heart of this project lies the effort to synthesise theory, artistic practice, and lived memory. The frame, in this context, is not just a compositional boundary but a dynamic field where perception and thought are continually negotiated. It becomes a zone of resonance: between internal and external space, between structure and sensation.
Alongside academic writings, this piece contributes to an ongoing inquiry into the role of montage in shaping the temporal and spatial conditions of moving image practice. It asks: What can a new notion of the frame do to cinematic experience—and conversely, what can cinematic practice reveal about the nature of framing itself? Rather than offering a resolved narrative, Where is My Journey lingers in the uncertainties of movement and fragmentation. It proposes a poetics of interruption—where image, sound, and silence are composed not to communicate a story, but to evoke a spatial condition of thought.