

This marble sculpture stages a quiet drama of inversion: an organic, spine-like form descends through a rigid rectangular frame, as if living tissue were being translated—imperfectly—into architecture. The cool, chalky surface catches light with a clinical tenderness, letting rippled edges and softened bulges read like memory eroded by time, while the dark ground behind deepens the sense of suspended breath. Below, the small, reclining head becomes a hushed witness or sacrificed self, turning the work into a meditation on containment—how identity is shaped, pressed, and ultimately released by the structures meant to hold it.







