
It begins with a single question:
What is your relationship with grief?
The Grief Box brings this question to public spaces, where — in turn, embracing our shared experience — stories of loss can be recorded and preserved.
Through sound and story, the Grief Box shares personal mourning as a collective human experience now and as an archive (a time capsule) for future remembrance.

Box I
Individual stories are recorded.
Box II
The stories are fused into a soundscape, answering the question "What does all our grieving sound like?" The soundscape will be presented as an installation.
Box III
The stories, the soundscape plus a companion podcast and short documentary film chronicling the project will be sealed in a time capsule for future generations to know we grieved too.

The anonymity is intentional and essential.
By stepping back from individual recognition, the focus remains on the stories themselves — on what is shared, what is remembered and what is carried forward.
In this way, the work is both deeply personal and wholly collective, a space where private mourning becomes part of a shared, enduring legacy.