When am I really myself? It is difficult to make time to actively think about "who I am," sometimes acting in response to other people's behavior and relationships. I feel that my identity is more shaken in modern urban life. When we encounter a line, a shape, a color, or an object, we can actively notice the slightest sway in our hearts, talk with ourselves and others about that sway, and gain a new understanding of ourselves. She conveys these ideas through her artwork, mainly by translating her mental images into lines, shapes, and colors. The forms in her works are as improvisational and free as drawings. The boundaries of the drawn lines are blurred or made ambiguous, and the artist is conscious of the fact that the work is like the pulse of a person, the tremor of a heartbeat, or the temperature of a human body.