This work is a monochrome portrait constructed from approximately 20,000 hand-placed dots. The image is built through repetition and control, with no predefined identity assigned to the subject.
The face remains intentionally unresolved. It does not declare age, gender, or emotional state. Instead, it holds structure while withholding definition.
The work shifts responsibility to the viewer. Meaning is not delivered — it is projected. Each spectator completes the portrait by identifying who they see, revealing their own internal references, biases, and associations.
The process is fixed and disciplined. The interpretation is unstable.
This tension is central: a controlled system produces an open identity.
The work asks:
What does character become when it is not defined by the artist, but constructed by the viewer?