

Reduced to a single, emphatic silhouette, the figure seems to assemble itself from blunt, angular strokes—part body, part scaffolding—suggesting a person constructed by the pressures of structure and routine. The stark black-on-white contrast turns gesture into declaration, where negative space becomes the true stage, holding a quiet loneliness around the bent posture. The chair-like geometry reads as both support and constraint, hinting at the paradox of rest: a moment of stillness that can feel like containment. In this economy of means, the work becomes a meditation on endurance—how identity persists even when rendered as pure outline and weight.







