Four installations examining how corporate language reshapes human life—from valuation to recall, warranty to consent. Each piece translates one bureaucratic instrument into its logical extreme.
A life treated as publicly traded security. Real-time metrics, volatility tracking, and sentiment analysis applied to a single human biography. Value as continuous obligation.
Episodes of a life framed as product defects requiring remediation. Childhood, career changes, and grief rewritten as safety hazards. Quality control applied to existence.
Care promised within limits that exclude what matters most. Support structures that protect against everything except real vulnerability. The fine print of conditional empathy.
The agreement you never read governing the identity you inhabit. Continuous measurement, algorithmic legibility, and consent after the fact. Participation as non-negotiable contract.
These pieces do not offer solutions or suggest that corporate logic can be reversed through better tools. They make visible what it looks like when lives are processed through systems designed for inventory, risk assessment, and contractual obligation. The installation asks: in a culture where everything is evaluated, what forms of meaning persist outside the frame?