

This sculpted bust approaches portraiture as an excavation, where the deliberately rough, tactile surface holds light in small fractures, suggesting a life built from weathering rather than polish. The head’s slight turn and the steady, inward gaze create a quiet psychological tension—half public composure, half private reckoning—while the broad planes of the forehead and cheekbones anchor the form with stoic resolve. Subtle asymmetries in the eyes and mouth resist idealization, making the sitter feel vividly present, as though memory and matter are negotiating what can be truly preserved. The muted earthen tonality reinforces the work’s sense of grounded human gravity, elevating vulnerability into monument.







