‘Her porcelain heart’ explores the frightening realities that seep into a child’s imagination, presented through a childlike perspective of how the world is seen and understood. The work follows a venerable young girl -representing Kaur’s younger self- whose fragile, sensitive, and emotionally exposed. She is positioned against a threatening antagonist: a spiked, dangerous presence that embodies fear, harm, and naivety disguised as control. The dollhouse represents a false sense of safety. While it appears protective, its lace curtains remain transparent and easily seen through, symbolizing the illusion of security within the home. The child does not yet realize she is already damaged internally; her pain is visible, seeping out, yet remains unacknowledged. The work reflects the quiet breaking of childhood innocence, mourning not only trauma but the loss of safety and protection that was never truly present. The stop motion video is displayed on a portable DVD player, like the one the artist owned as a child, rein enforcing nostalgia and repetition. It reflects how this narrative continues to replay, unresolved, within the artist. The video is silent, as a child was too timid to speak. Instead, communication existed through handwritten letters left for her mother’s vulnerability, positioning her as equally defenseless. Through sculpture, moving image and careful fabrication, her porcelain heart communicates unspoken trauma, repetition, and survival through a child’s lens.