

This patinated bronze figure, poised in a chair that doubles as a living landscape, fuses the human body with branching vegetal reliefs, as if thought itself were taking root across the torso. The elongated vertical backrest lifts the composition into a quiet monumentality, while small bird-like forms settle at the periphery like messengers between interior reverie and the outer world. The cool green-blue oxidation reads as time made visibleβan atmospheric skin that softens the angular geometry and suggests a contemplative archaeology of memory. In its stillness, the work becomes an allegory of stewardship: the seated presence as both shelter and threshold for fragile life.







