

This small animal sculpture carries a disarming quietness: its bowed head and weighty stance read less as motion than as contemplation, as if the creature has folded inward to listen to the ground beneath it. The pale, mottled surface—bruised with smoky grays and warm stains—suggests lived time, turning the body into a kind of landscape where tenderness and vulnerability co-exist. Set against a cool, open field of blue, the form feels simultaneously protected and exposed, inviting a meditation on domestication, dependence, and the gentle gravity of simply being.







