Torso of a Woman transcends mere anatomy. It does not seek to replicate the female figure but to evoke its essence through rhythm, void and surface. The sculpture is both absence and presence: a torso without identity, yet charged with memory and emotion.
Forged in iron, yet softened by the slow oxidation of time, the material holds a paradox strength wrapped in erosion, permanence fractured by decay. This tension echoes the lived experience of womanhood: both fierce and fragile, elemental and evolving.
The piece does not ask to be seen. It asks to be felt as a vessel of identity, transformation and silent endurance.
Torso of a Woman is not representation. It is a state of becoming.