In his previous work, “Maybe, there is something there,” Kazutaka Yoshida composed an installation consisting of disparate elements aside from photos, including words, sounds and actions. He originally studied photography and has continued to actively participate in photographic discussions up until the present. But with the passage of time, his artistic expressions seemed to have withdrawn further and further away from photography. His primary motif of “I had never thought about it” is a ‘convenience store,’ which has long been his means of livelihood. In this work, he has adopted various matters that are related to his daily life at the convenience store in which he works. Although the primary concept has changed, the ideas from the previous work have also taken root in this installation. The following comment I made on his previous work also applies to this work: “When we talk of the innumerous, insignificant fragments that we produce on a daily basis, we realize that the world exists within those fragments. Behind the world that Yoshida manifests through the utilization of his unstable methodology exists his conviction toward the world.”