

This compact figurative sculpture distills the human body into a slow, rising contour, where weight and tenderness coexist in a single, swollen volume. Its sea-green patina—pocked, veined, and weathered—acts like a skin of time, turning the surface into a map of erosion and memory as light pools on the rounded form and slips into darker recesses. The asymmetrical stance suggests both vulnerability and quiet endurance, as if the figure is caught between concealment and revelation, carrying an interior life that the simplified anatomy only amplifies. In its deliberate ambiguity, the work becomes less a portrait than an emblem of presence: matter holding emotion without narrating it outright.







