top of page

Into the Woods

  • Apr 15
  • 1 min read

Updated: Apr 16



There’s a moment when the body no longer feels separate from its surroundings, when movement becomes instinct and form begins to respond to something unseen. Into the Woods comes from that space.


This life size bronze explores the human figure in a state of transition, caught between grounding and release. The lifted leg and extended arms suggest both balance and surrender, as if the figure is responding to an internal rhythm rather than an external force. It is not a fixed pose, but a fleeting moment held in material.


The surface carries the marks of process, intentionally left to preserve a sense of immediacy. Bronze, with its weight and permanence, contrasts the lightness of the gesture, creating tension between what is solid and what feels almost weightless.


The base anchors the figure, yet it also suggests something organic, almost as if the form is emerging from or dissolving back into it. There is no clear boundary, only a continuous relationship between figure and environment.


Into the Woods is less about the body itself and more about what moves through it. It reflects a search for that quiet connection between form, instinct, and presence.


Category: Figures

Tags: bronze, life-size

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page