

This sculptural thicket rises like a remembered landscape—thin, restless stems and blade-like leaves caught mid-sway, their upward reach countered by a base that feels heavy with time. The green patina reads as both verdigris and moss, lending the work an archaeological quiet, as if nature has been cast into permanence yet still insists on movement through its jagged silhouettes. Set against an expanse of white, the negative space becomes a kind of weather—air, absence, and distance—allowing each branch to draw calligraphic lines that speak to resilience and fragility in the same breath. Anchored on warm wood, the piece stages a dialogue between the organic and the enduring, suggesting growth as a form of memory made visible.







