

This sculptural figure feels like an ancestral bust interrupted by a private storm—its softened, oxidized blue patina suggests time’s slow weathering, while the face remains eerily lucid, as if holding a thought it cannot release. A lattice of wiry, glyph-like protrusions rises behind the head, turning the silhouette into a kind of antenna, implying that memory and identity are continually “received” and recalibrated rather than fixed. The composition balances tenderness and fracture: fleshy curls and draped, baroque folds are counterweighted by sharp, schematic marks, staging a dialogue between embodied history and the engineered structures that now frame it. In this tension, the work reads as a portrait of consciousness itself—part relic, part signal—where the self is both preserved and actively rewritten.







