The Art of Being Too Much is an exhibition about the courage to fully exist. About allowing yourself to feel, to create, to love to be vulnerable and powerful at the same time. About that “too much” which is, in fact, the exact measure of our truth. We live in a world that constantly teaches us to shrink ourselves. To be less sensitive, less intense, less uncomfortable. To adapt to a “normal” that, more often than not, doesn’t include all of us. True art emerges precisely here to question existing rules, as a form of brave, uncomfortable rebellion that dares to say out loud what many of us think but don’t dare to articulate. Art doesn’t let us hide there. It pulls us out of the illusion of comfort, shakes us a little, makes us ask questions, and reminds us that “normal” is not a fixed rule, but something alive, something that, from time to time, needs to be rewritten. And once things are spoken, they can also be changed. True art has never been about fitting in. If you look back, all the artists who changed something were considered too much, too strange, too sensitive, or too uncomfortable for the norms of their time. And maybe that’s exactly the role of art: to give us permission to question the rules we’ve been told are “normal,” when in reality, there is no single rule that works for everyone. Every time society has moved forward, it wasn’t from comfort, but from moments when someone had the courage to say: “this doesn’t work,” “we were wrong,” “let’s do it differently.” Art pulls us out from under the blanket of comfort, shakes us a little, and invites us to imagine a better reality before it exists. The Art of Being Too Much is born from this tension: between the fear of being “too much” and the deep need to be real. The exhibition is built as an inner journey in three stages from darkness, through symbolic gates, toward the encounter with the authentic self.