
Oral Memories
Rooted in Lebanese and Togolese heritages, this project draws on memory that survives without written archives. History is preserved through storytelling, songs and the body itself, evolving through repetition and reinterpretation.
The body becomes an archive, carrying knowledge through movement, posture and presence. Clothing becomes a surface where memory is not illustrated, but physically embedded.



Memory is not fixed; it evolves through repetition and reinterpretation.
