Image 1: Entrance at the first concentric shell of layered earth belonging to each province in Bengal (West Bengal and Bangladesh)
Image 2: Temporal Thresholds and Material Memory – concentric pathway between layers representing pre-colonial material memory – earth shell to the left and brick shell to the right.
Image 3: Temporal Thresholds and Material Memory – concentric pathway between layers representing pre-colonial material memory – earth shell, followed by brick shell of different textures, with terracotta and laterite to the right.
Image 4: Temporal Thresholds and Material Memory – concentric pathway between layers representing pre-colonial material memory – brick shell, followed by terracotta and laterite, with painted plaster white walls and exposed concrete to the right.
Image 5: Liminal Space – the open transition expanse between the central archaeological space and the tightly spaced concentric spherical spaces representing historical periods. The liminal space depth allows a view of all chronological material shells representing historical periods.
Image 6: The central space is conceived as an archaeological site with fragments of memory expressed as fragmented objects – oral histories, fragments of habitation, and fragments of means of migration, within an archaeological ruin.
Image 7: The fragments of habitation include multiple housing scenarios of subaltern refugees, representing rural, semi-urban, and urban habitation conditions. The fragments of means of migration include different transportation procedures.
Image 8: A close up of the inner wall with refugee portraits pixelated and embedded in concrete. Human sculptures in an endless march along the path.
Image 9: The roof of the central space is a field of floating cylinders in a gravity-free space. Each cylinder is made with the earth from a particular district in Bengal. A circular body of water is elevated at the center, surrounded by the panoramic wall of refugees embedded in concrete.