Among scattered, large blown-glass spheres, one is lifted by a growing structure. Along a wavering band, reminiscent of a delicate, curled hair, sacks are suspended. Filled with weight, they stretch the material. Yet instead of pulling downward, they rise, eventually reaching the ceiling and becoming its support.
The relationship between weight and structure is reversed. What should burden begins to construct.
The lifted sphere becomes a turning point — fragile and ephemeral, yet initiating a process of growth. Within this contradiction, a tension emerges between overload and the possibility of transformation. This inversion of gravity opens a question about the future — whether increasing burdens reinforce the structure or lead to its collapse.
The work is rendered in shades of magenta — a color that does not exist in nature as a single wavelength, but emerges through perception, as a response to the combination of red and blue.
Across a soft, seemingly innocent pink surface, traces of darker red appear — like particles of dried blood settling beneath a layer of ordinariness. Smoothness contrasts with roughness, forming a map of processes unfolding within the form.
Selected works available for acquisition. For inquiries, please contact the studio.
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