



This relief stages a raucous triangle of play where two clown archetypes—rendered in warm, earthy pigments and theatrical collars—press in from the margins, framing the child as both participant and protagonist. The sculpted textures of the stone-like ground hold their laughter in place, turning a fleeting joke into something fossilized, as if memory itself has been pressed into clay. With its exaggerated mouths, bright noses, and the child’s defiant tongue, the piece toggles between delight and unease, suggesting how innocence learns to flirt with performance, mask, and mischief. The tight composition compresses space into intimacy, making joy feel communal yet slightly claustrophobic—an invitation and a provocation in the same breath.







