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Male forms - Ranging from poetic to concise - more academic, emotional, or conceptual


 

This work manipulates and mirrors the male body to disrupt its expected shape. By twisting and recomposing limbs and torsos, the piece explores transformation, vulnerability, and the fluidity of identity. The familiar becomes unfamiliar, inviting viewers to reconsider how the body defines the self.

          This piece reflects the tension between who we are and who we are becoming. The mirrored body is both whole and broken—reaching, folding, reshaping itself. It speaks to the private act of trying to fit into one’s own skin, learning to accept the parts that feel twisted or unfamiliar. Transformation is not always graceful, but it is always honest.


This work explores the body as a shifting landscape—unfixed, malleable, and in constant negotiation with itself. By mirroring and rearranging male forms, the piece challenges the assumption of a singular, stable identity. Limbs fold into unfamiliar places; torsos stretch into new symmetries; what is usually recognizable becomes strange.

The body becomes a site of metamorphosis—a vessel of memory, instinct, vulnerability, and power. These forms ask the viewer to reconsider where the body begins, where it ends, and how identity expands when we are no longer confined to traditional anatomy.



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