

Two corroded figures—one earthen and oxidized, the other washed in a verdigris tide—stand in a charged pause that feels less like a meeting than an excavation of memory. Their rough, pitted skins turn decay into ornament, allowing time itself to become the sculptor, while the white void around them heightens the sense of distance and unspoken exchange. The dialogue between warm rust and cool turquoise reads as a meditation on duality—body and relic, intimacy and estrangement—where presence is asserted through what has been weathered away. In this sparse encounter, the work suggests that identity is not polished into being, but accrued through erosion, fracture, and survival.







