



Rendered as a fractured bas-relief, the figure emerges from stone like a memory excavated—at once intimate and archetypal—while the splayed cracks read as both time’s damage and the psyche’s fault lines. Multiple hands veil the eyes, turning sight into absence and suggesting a ritual of refusal: protection from truth, or an enforced blindness that becomes its own kind of wound. The muted, earthen palette and worn surface texture lend the scene a funerary stillness, yet the careful symmetry of the body anchors a quiet endurance, as if the self persists even when perception is taken away. In this tension between touch and loss, the work becomes a meditation on vulnerability—how identity is held together, precariously, by what we choose (or are compelled) not to see.







