Weep is an exploration of internal pressure made visible. The central face—distorted within a transparent, curved enclosure—suggests the feeling of being held in a moment that cannot yet break open; echoing the tension between outer vibrancy and inner weight.
The rounded, glasslike boundary functions as both barrier and lens, altering how the subject is perceived and how the subject sees the world in return. This distortion speaks to the quiet, private ways sorrow reshapes perception: bending lines, blurring edges, and suspending time.
This work invites viewers to consider how grief—whether fleeting or enduring—changes one’s form without erasing one’s presence. Weep is not only about loss, but about the strange clarity found in stillness, and the transformation that begins before a tear ever falls.
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