Home Is Where My Habits Have a Habitat is a photographic series that examines the unique environment of Artscape Gibraltar Point, a thriving arts and culture facility on Toronto Island housed in a former school building. Influenced by Lynne Cohen’s Occupied Territory and her focus on empty institutional spaces as sites of ideological and architectural “camouflage,” the project depicts unoccupied interiors to foreground how design and spatial organization shape perception, affect, and experience. Through images of vintage and repurposed objects—such as pianos, chalkboards, photographs, and artworks—the series reflects the building’s layered history and its current function as a residence for artists, emphasizing spaces that resist clear definition or singular use. By embracing obscurity, absence, and liminality, the work frames the Artscape building as a multipurpose habitat where past and present coexist, extending my broader photographic inquiry into presence, absence, and institutional space, also explored in my series Ghost Stories, which critically examines the architectural and design elements of long-term care facilities and their relationship to the medical gaze.