

This sculptural tableau turns the act of tea service into a quiet orbit of intimacy and unease, where a pale, animal-like body coils protectively around a circular void like a guardian of absence. The restrained whiteness amplifies every shadowed detail—small cups, spoons, and black birds—so that each object reads as a fragile ritual set against the stark gravity of the central opening. The composition’s ring form suggests a closed cycle of appetite, care, and consumption, while the birds punctuate the serenity as omens, pecking at the boundary between domestic comfort and something quietly feral. In its meticulous stillness, the work proposes that hospitality can be both sanctuary and trap—an elegant ceremony circling what cannot be filled.







