Inner Form
Inner Form moves beyond the visible structure of the face to explore what lies beneath it—the essence that cannot be fully seen, only sensed. The sculpture presents a face that feels both emerging and dissolving, as if the outer features are only a thin layer over a deeper, more complex interior.
The contours are subtle and fluid, suggesting a form shaped from within rather than imposed from the outside. Certain features appear to surface gently, while others recede, creating a quiet tension between revelation and concealment. The surface itself carries marks and textures that evoke an inner landscape—emotional, psychological, and timeless.
Light interacts with the sculpture in a way that enhances this inward quality, revealing shifting depths and soft transitions. The face does not demand recognition; instead, it invites contemplation, encouraging the viewer to look beyond appearance and into presence.
Inner Form is not about identity as something fixed or external—it is about the unseen structure of being, where experience, memory, and emotion take shape in silence.
Artist Statement
In Inner Form, I explore the idea that the true essence of the human face lies beneath its surface. I am not interested in capturing likeness, but in revealing what cannot be directly seen—the internal forces that shape who we are.
My process is intuitive and layered. I build and remove, allowing the form to evolve naturally, guided by the material and by an internal rhythm. The result is a face that feels in transition, as if it is becoming rather than being defined.
I am drawn to the relationship between the inner and the outer—how the invisible leaves its trace on the visible. Each mark, each shift in texture, is a reflection of this dialogue.
Through this work, I invite the viewer to move beyond the surface and engage with the deeper presence within. Inner Form is an attempt to give shape to the intangible—to the quiet, complex interior that exists within every human being.