In People Call Me Confusion, repetition becomes the central structural principle. Similar forms repeat and accumulate, creating a structure that is visually complex but built from simple elements. Freud described repetition as a compulsion — the mind returning to the same thought in an attempt to resolve something that remains unresolved. Repetition does not always produce clarity; it often produces confusion. Ruheel translates this psychological repetition into structural repetition. Confusion is built through accumulation.
We live not only among objects and buildings, but among words — words that were spoken, words that were misunderstood, words that were never said, and words that ended something.
In other wor(l)ds is a body of sculptural works that gives physical form to these invisible presences. Derived from language, memory, and psychological states, the works translate conversations into structures, emotions into weight, and sentences into bodies.
These sculptures do not represent objects.
They represent conditions — confusion, indecision, repetition, rejection, and conclusion.
They are not meant to be read.
They are meant to be walked through.