The Everyday Score is a series of three small mechanized ceramic sculptures that resemble miniature domestic stages. Inside each structure, fragments of household furniture slowly rotate: a bed, a chair, a table, and small objects of daily life. A ghostly garment is suspended among them. As the mechanism turns, warm light projects their shadows onto the walls, enlarging these modest objects into spectral presences. The work approaches everyday life as a score: a set of repeated gestures, habits, and movements that we perform without always being aware of them. The rotating objects suggest the circular rhythm of domestic routines, repeated each day until they become almost invisible. What is intimate and familiar becomes strange, theatrical, and fragile. The whiteness of the ceramic gives the furniture and garment the appearance of bones, or of a hidden skeleton. These objects seem like the remains of ordinary life, stripped of color and suspended between presence and absence. They reveal the invisible framework beneath habit: the structures that continue to organize our gestures even when we no longer notice them. By combining ceramic, light, shadow, movement, and repetition, The Everyday Score makes visible the quiet choreography of domestic life. It asks how ordinary routines become internalized as a score we perform by heart, and how the home quietly shapes our bodies, gestures, and sense of time. .