

This compact stone sculpture stages a quiet drama of togetherness and distance: two simplified, mask-like heads sit at opposite ends of a shared vessel, their rigid profiles suggesting conversation held back, or intimacy tempered by restraint. The broad, boat-shaped base functions as both cradle and boundary—an emotional commons—while the dense chiseled texture at its center reads like sedimented memory, a field of lived time that binds the figures even as they face away. Subtle shifts between polished planes and matte roughness let light skim and snag, turning the work into a meditation on how relationships are carried: as weight, as passage, as shelter.







