DREAMLAG

 
 

Dreamlag is a series of early-morning drawings produced through a spontaneous, time-based practice. Created with coloured pencil on paper, each work captures the brief cognitive transition between sleep and waking, when perception is unsettled and forms emerge without premeditation.

Rather than illustrating specific dreams, the drawings function as quick studies in attention and gesture. Their improvised lines and shifting structures reflect the lag between internal imagery and conscious interpretation or a space where pattern, intuition, and residual memory intersect.

Dreamlag positions the early-morning body as an active site of sensing and low-threshold cognition. The drawings operate as a daily research method: a way to map thought as it first takes shape, before it becomes anchored by routine or language.

Across the series, colour and line are used to observe how ideas surface, fragment, and reorganize. Dreamlag offers a visual record of this transitional state and an ongoing investigation into how perception shifts across temporal and bodily thresholds.