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Minimalist abstract handcarved wooden sculpture
Carved from a single piece of wood, this abstract sculpture explores the tension between organic materiality and geometric rhythm. The artist transforms the inherent softness of wood grain into a structured yet fluid vertical form, where each curve and indentation appears both deliberate and instinctive.
The surface, marked by the natural patterns of the timber, becomes a record of both growth and craftsmanship—an interplay between nature’s slow formation and the artist’s shaping hand. Light glides across the sculpture’s undulating contours, revealing alternating zones of shadow and reflection that emphasize its rhythmic, almost architectural presence.
Neither figurative nor purely formal, the work inhabits a space between sculpture and totem—suggesting a quiet monumentality despite its modest scale. Its warm tonality and tactile surface invite contemplation, positioning it as a meditation on form, process, and the enduring dialogue between the organic and the constructed.
Carved from a single piece of wood, this abstract sculpture explores the tension between organic materiality and geometric rhythm. The artist transforms the inherent softness of wood grain into a structured yet fluid vertical form, where each curve and indentation appears both deliberate and instinctive.
The surface, marked by the natural patterns of the timber, becomes a record of both growth and craftsmanship—an interplay between nature’s slow formation and the artist’s shaping hand. Light glides across the sculpture’s undulating contours, revealing alternating zones of shadow and reflection that emphasize its rhythmic, almost architectural presence.
Neither figurative nor purely formal, the work inhabits a space between sculpture and totem—suggesting a quiet monumentality despite its modest scale. Its warm tonality and tactile surface invite contemplation, positioning it as a meditation on form, process, and the enduring dialogue between the organic and the constructed.