"Faces of See Yourself" is a portrait series of many individuals, each wearing the same mask—not to conceal who they are, but to reveal what binds them. The mask becomes a symbol not of hiding, but of unifying. A paradox, yes—but one that breathes meaning into our fractured world.
The mask:
An identity forged by life and love.
A still surface on which the storms of difference dissolve.
It speaks of a humanity lost, and a humanity that might yet be found.
Each portrait tells a silent truth:
Though we wear the same mask, we are not the same.
And in that difference, behind that sameness, is our shared liberation.
In the surrealist tradition, this project turns the ordinary face into a mystery—and the mystery into a mirror. The mask is not a uniform, but a question mark. It asks:
Who are we when we choose to see ourselves as one?
What does love look like when it is not a feeling, but a form?
How do we live when we know we are both insignificant and vital?
Just as Magritte asked us to doubt what we think we see—
This is not a face—this project invites the viewer to look again.
Not at the face, but through it. Not at the mask, but beyond it.
To see humanity not as a set of features, but as a shared condition.
SEE YOURSELF.