

Carved from pale stone, this totemic figure balances between animal and emblem, its exaggerated, wing-like ears cleaving the surrounding air into a quiet architecture of presence. The artist contrasts a finely pebbled, tactile face with broad, satin planes above, letting light skim the surfaces so the form seems to breathe between weight and lift. Those small, insistently frontal eyes anchor the viewer in a mutual gaze, turning the sculpture into a guardian of threshold—part innocence, part vigilance—where simplicity becomes a ritual language. The stacked base reads like a pedestal and a footing at once, suggesting that what we elevate in art is often the most primal impulse to watch, listen, and endure.







