 This installation is called Reception, and it's a very major part of my dowry project. And so, obviously, I'm making my dowry, and people might have different definitions of what a dowry is, but in my mind, a traditional dowry is a collection of objects that have cultural relevance and worth, and they're used to sort of hand off a woman so she can advance in society through marriage. But my dowry has nothing to do with my personal life. It is purely for financial and professional gain, so that is why I'm here as the bride at the museum. The rest of the dowry, just kind of as an umbrella, it's a series of contemporary heirlooms that somehow represent how we measure our time or how we measure our worth. And a lot of my work obviously has to do with gender roles and how we measure our worth as women. So this piece, the reception is, well, actually, since we have so many people, what do you guys think it is? Yeah? A wedding? A wedding, yeah. What about it is wedding-like? Beautiful, we hope so, yeah. Cluttered? Cluttered, yeah. So there's this big abundance issue and congestion going on. And there's this balance between it being a wedding, and a lot of people think it looks like a baby shower. Yeah, that it definitely has a sort of little girl's room vibe. In general, the idea was to create a piece that merges the marital bed and the wedding reception, and to really bring those two together. And I use a ton of different materials, and all the materials act as vehicles for the ideas that I'm going for. So just to name off some of the things that are in here is we have bibles, we have feminine hygiene products that are making up the cake. So if you look at it really closely, it is how do we measure our worth? Is it through beauty? Is it through fertility? Is it through things like that?