Your Plan of Care: Difference between revisions

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|Date End=2025-02-28T00:00:00.000Z
|Date End=2025-02-28T00:00:00.000Z
|Event image=Your Plan of Care.jpg
|Event image=Your Plan of Care.jpg
|Event description=“Your Plan of Care” draws from my personal experiences with rare and undiagnosed disease, exploring the absurdity that seems to compound through frequent interface with the medical system. I was interested in trying to capture both whimsy and despair—two states of being often uncultivated in the sanitized bureaucratic pipelines of appointments, testing, and treatment plans. I sought to create an uncanny feedback loop between these two states in order to capture something of the confusing and often alienating experience of patienthood.
|Event description=''Your Plan of Care'' draws from my personal experiences with rare and undiagnosed disease, exploring the absurdity that seems to compound through frequent interface with the medical system. I was interested in trying to capture both whimsy and despair—two states of being often uncultivated in the sanitized bureaucratic pipelines of appointments, testing, and treatment plans. I sought to create an uncanny feedback loop between these two states in order to capture something of the confusing and often alienating experience of patienthood.


This project is viewable on desktop only.
This project is viewable on desktop only.

Latest revision as of 16:36, November 26, 2024


Your Plan of Care.jpg

Event Info
Date start 11.22.24
Date end 02.28.25
Start Time 12am
Format
Medium
Admission Free
Attend
Links · Resources
Resources

Your Plan of Care draws from my personal experiences with rare and undiagnosed disease, exploring the absurdity that seems to compound through frequent interface with the medical system. I was interested in trying to capture both whimsy and despair—two states of being often uncultivated in the sanitized bureaucratic pipelines of appointments, testing, and treatment plans. I sought to create an uncanny feedback loop between these two states in order to capture something of the confusing and often alienating experience of patienthood.

This project is viewable on desktop only.