The Tribunal assembles four stark, reclaimed steel uprights, each gripping a fired clay visage:
fragmented expressions caught in silent testimony. Positioned like a makeshift council, these solemn faces evoke a suspended judgment: rigid and weathered by industrial history, yet bearing the human imprint.
The steel, once utilitarian and functional, now transforms into a skeletal scaffolding of memory. The clay heads, fragile and transient, contrast that solidity… bearing the human imprint, suggesting both vulnerability and resilience. In their meeting at the structural crossroads, each face confronts the others and the viewer, demanding contemplation of how we bear witness to labor, loss, and reclamation.
As an outdoor piece, The Tribunal gathers the elements—light, wind, shadow—into its performance. Rust-darkened metal responds to sunlight; clay shifts in tone with passing clouds and seasons. This ever-changing dynamic underscores the work’s meditation on endurance and the scars of reinvention.
This sculpture balances elegance and unease. Carved from limestone, the torso suggests both classical beauty and anatomical rawness. A found metal object—bolted across the chest—interrupts the organic flow with mechanical precision, evoking restraint, memory, or intervention.
The Sheathed explores what is embedded, what is hidden, and what holds.
A circular band of brass holds the sun in suspension. Below it, a vertical timber rises, its crown charred, bearing the mark of contact. The work draws from the Promethean act not as mythic heroism, but as transfer. Fire is not gifted cleanly. It is taken, carried, and altered in the process.
The brass ring reads simultaneously as halo, burden, and boundary. It frames light while resisting it, catching the sun only by implication. The burned wood records consequence.
Set outdoors, the sculpture allows time and weather to continue the exchange. Light moves through the circle. The char deepens. The piece remains suspended between reverence and transgression, holding the moment where knowledge, risk, and responsibility first touch.
The Tribunal assembles four stark, reclaimed steel uprights, each gripping a fired clay visage:
fragmented expressions caught in silent testimony. Positioned like a makeshift council, these solemn faces evoke a suspended judgment: rigid and weathered by industrial history, yet bearing the human imprint.
The steel, once utilitarian and functional, now transforms into a skeletal scaffolding of memory. The clay heads, fragile and transient, contrast that solidity… bearing the human imprint, suggesting both vulnerability and resilience. In their meeting at the structural crossroads, each face confronts the others and the viewer, demanding contemplation of how we bear witness to labor, loss, and reclamation.
As an outdoor piece, The Tribunal gathers the elements—light, wind, shadow—into its performance. Rust-darkened metal responds to sunlight; clay shifts in tone with passing clouds and seasons. This ever-changing dynamic underscores the work’s meditation on endurance and the scars of reinvention.
This sculpture balances elegance and unease. Carved from limestone, the torso suggests both classical beauty and anatomical rawness. A found metal object—bolted across the chest—interrupts the organic flow with mechanical precision, evoking restraint, memory, or intervention.
The Sheathed explores what is embedded, what is hidden, and what holds.
A circular band of brass holds the sun in suspension. Below it, a vertical timber rises, its crown charred, bearing the mark of contact. The work draws from the Promethean act not as mythic heroism, but as transfer. Fire is not gifted cleanly. It is taken, carried, and altered in the process.
The brass ring reads simultaneously as halo, burden, and boundary. It frames light while resisting it, catching the sun only by implication. The burned wood records consequence.
Set outdoors, the sculpture allows time and weather to continue the exchange. Light moves through the circle. The char deepens. The piece remains suspended between reverence and transgression, holding the moment where knowledge, risk, and responsibility first touch.