Agnes Questionmark creates immersive works that explore how identity and the body are shaped, challenged, and transformed by science, technology, and social systems. Her multidisciplinary practice spans performance, sculpture, video, and installation, often placing the body—her own or those imagined—at the center of environments that resemble laboratories, operating rooms, or unfamiliar ritual spaces. Within these worlds, viewers are invited to reflect on what it means to change, to adapt, and to become something other than what is expected.
Her work often involves the body in suspended or constrained states, connected to mechanical systems that seem both supportive and restrictive. These performances suggest moments of transformation that are not fully visible or resolved. The body becomes a site of ongoing experimentation, where control and vulnerability coexist. These carefully staged situations challenge how we think about who controls the body, how it is categorized, and how it might evolve beyond familiar boundaries.
Through sculpture and video, the artist draws from imagery related to medical science, anatomy, and genetic research—but always reimagines these sources in poetic and speculative ways. Rather than presenting the body as something fixed or fully understood, she offers it as a fluid and responsive entity, constantly interacting with its environment and reshaping itself in the process.
At the heart of her work is a belief that identity is not something we inherit or possess once and for all, but something we continually construct—through our choices, our environments, and the systems that surround us. By creating spaces where traditional definitions of the human are suspended, she opens up the possibility for new forms of life, new ways of being, and new kinds of freedom.

