This series documents public gatherings in South Korea following the December 3 declaration of martial law, focusing on what remains unseen. While the streets are filled with political expressions, some voices gain visibility while others remain obscured. This work examines how selective visibility is formed. A key instance is an individual who sustained a 28-day hunger strike, revealing the threshold between what can be expressed and what remains unheard. It explores how visibility, silence, and absence are unevenly distributed across society.