Sculpture
My sculptures are systems in which complexity emerges from repetition. Built from Lego and wood, these structures exist in the tension between order and excess, precision and chaos. Each piece invites close inspection, offering a gradual unraveling of detail that rewards patience and attention.
These works demand to be studied. Their dense layering pulls the viewer in, each detail compounding until the whole becomes overwhelming. They create spaces where observation is not passive but participatory—where looking is an act of engagement, and time slows in the presence of intricacy.
Some of my sculptures explicitly engage with technology’s tendency to steal our focus. All of them reflect on time and attention. The process of fabrication—carving, sanding, assembling—becomes a way of reclaiming presence, diverting my focus from screens to the physical world. In constructing these objects, I am creating not just forms, but moments of sustained observation, both for myself and those who encounter them.