

This quietly monumental sculpture distills human intimacy into a few elemental volumes—two upright presences, one leaning into the other, their rounded heads forming a tender axis of protection and belonging. The dark, oxidized surface carries a bruised green patina that reads like time made visible, softening the severity of the geometric planes and allowing light to skim across edges like a slow breath. A smaller figure is held low within the vertical corridor of forms, turning negative space into a sheltering embrace and suggesting lineage, care, and the gravity of shared silence. In its restraint, the work proposes that love is not ornament but architecture—built from weight, proximity, and enduring touch.