My practice attempts to introduce the presence of an "other dimension" as a foreign body within real space. Rather than creating a new space, the work produces subtle ruptures within the structures of perception that we unconsciously accept as reality. We live with the assumptions that walls are flat, space is continuous, and vision is reliable. Yet these premises are far more fragile than they appear. By directly intervening in architectural elements such as walls and floors, my works visualize what seems to exist on the "other side" of space through distortion and instability. These spaces are neither illusion nor fantasy; they emerge as perceptual events completed through the viewer's bodily awareness. The works are installed by simply attaching them directly to the wall. By minimizing display techniques, real space itself is allowed to function as an essential component of the work. Rather than proposing a new world, my intention is to reveal how the reality we already inhabit is unstable, malleable, and fundamentally dependent on perception.