

This monumental crimson head, dominated by an impossibly enlarged ear, turns the act of listening into a visceral architecture—an open chamber where sound feels as physical as flesh. The glossy red surface catches daylight like a warning beacon, amplifying the clenched brow and screaming mouth into a single circuit of reception and release: what is heard becomes pressure, and what is felt erupts as voice. Set against an ordinary lawn, the sculpture reads as a public allegory for our age of overexposure—hyper-attentive, overstimulated, and painfully unable to contain the noise we absorb.







