A selected print and book — current offerings from the Gallery and Library.

At some point in our past, a human asked the first question—and self-awareness was born. Yet the same consciousness that gave us power also confronts us with our limits. This essay explores the paradox of being human: the spark of understanding and the weight of knowing.

A village does not starve only when rice runs out. It begins to thin when everything is counted, explained, and held too tightly. The Pact of the Uncounted Grain remembers an older law: that once each season, abundance must pass through human hands without measure, or the world begins, quietly, to lose its meaning.

The old certainties have weakened, yet the question remains: how should one live? This manifesto explores what it means to create meaning, think independently, and shape a life deliberately in an uncertain world.

Leaving the temple is not the end of the pilgrimage. What was seen must pass through memory and language, and something inevitably changes along the way. Writing about Angkor becomes an act of translation—from stone and silence into sentences—where something is always lost, and something unexpectedly revealed.