Imagine standing in a room filled entirely with rabbits—one hundred of them, each staring back at you. The space tightens. Movement slows. A quiet unease settles in.
Rabbits, often understood as symbols of vulnerability and prey, appear here transformed. Through scale, repetition, and density, individual figures merge into a collective presence—no longer passive, but quietly confrontational.
As viewers move through the installation, familiar power dynamics begin to shift. The body becomes acutely aware of itself in space: watched, measured, implicated. The assumed position of power and control begins to erode. The familiar hierarchy between viewer and subject dissolves, replaced by a quiet, persistent tension. This work transforms fragility into force. It considers how power is constructed, how it is felt, and what happens when it is redistributed across a collective body. Rooted in personal experience, the installation moves toward a reclamation of agency—where vulnerability is no longer a condition of weakness, but a site of resistance.
Pictured: Kara Zuzu with her work.
Photo: Courtesy of the Artist