These sculptures emerge from the detritus of industry—polyethylene terephthalate, a material engineered for permanence yet destined to be discarded. Through... Read More
These sculptures emerge from the detritus of industry—polyethylene terephthalate, a material engineered for permanence yet destined to be discarded. Through heat, the surfaces blister, ripple, and scar, echoing geological textures shaped by deep time. This treatment transforms plastic from a smooth industrial skin into something resembling stone, bark, or coral: forms where human manufacturing collides with the slow erosions of nature.
In their dynamism, they become vessels of both fragility and resilience. They suggest a future archaeology, where plastic outlasts bodies and buildings, yet is endlessly reconfigured. Each piece resists the finality of waste, instead opening into cycles of decay, renewal, and movement—where nature, time, and industry entangle in forms both unsettling and vital.