Keep Me Safe does not speak of denied freedom, but of the fear of freedom itself. The chain is not... Read More
Keep Me Safe does not speak of denied freedom, but of the fear of freedom itself. The chain is not only what restrains us: it is also what we cling to when the world becomes too vast and uncertain. The figure, built from fragments of color and identity, seems to ask for protection while struggling against the price that every form of protection entails. In this tension between surrender and imprisonment, the work reveals an uncomfortable truth: often, what saves us is the very same thing that prevents us from going beyond.