 Hi, everyone. Thank you to CC Arts Link and Art in General for supporting me during this residency. Our theme of reflection is transformation. And I decided to talk about it, to reflect a bit about it through my own practice, which looks at the way in which neoliberalism shifts the way we relate to one another and how we perceive different understandings of temporality and spatiality. And one of them is this possibility, where time is money, in which time gets quantified and monetized. And you'd say this is like a daily saying that I even seen on the subways in New York. But also what it's interesting for me is that this is a saying that has been coined in Renaissance by Leon Baptista Alberti. So in a book he wrote Il Libri della Familia, where he was trying to talk about money and household and education and marriage. Then from time, I was thinking about space and how also space gets compressed physically, but then also gets expanded digitally and virtually. And at the same time, it gets removed for ourselves and disembodied. And we have this relation with space which filtered through new technologies becomes abstracted in a way that I'm still trying to understand. And maybe related to this is also that the boundaries between leisure and labor are getting more and more blurred. And then the term job is replaced to occupation. And then I'm thinking like, what that implies in terms of performing constantly, of constantly producing creative content, of constantly being present, in a way that also changes the way we interact. So in my work, I'm also trying to perform in different places. And as Barbara was saying earlier about this, maybe these changes in temporality and spatiality and socioeconomic context also allow for a place of disruption where we can rethink the way we are normalized or conditioned or performing a collective choreography. So I'm thinking a lot about this in my works. And these are some examples of places where I did some performances. This is the studio at Art in General. So it's just now during the residency. And like all these spaces that allow me to think of this relation between choreography as an artistic practice and social choreographies that we can encounter in public spaces. And yeah, how we can just think about relations differently.