Tied Hands
This work deals mainly with the fragility of that element, which gives stability and structure to the organic body. The material being used – plaster – points out as well to the notion of fragility. The circular shape maintains a dialogue with the proposed location of this work – within a church. The circular shape has a central meaning in both religion and science. It represents perfection and wholeness and even God. It may also represent the circle of life, the transition from a material to an immaterial form, and to the contrast and the connection between body and soul. However, the open-endedness shape of this work may call for reflection on all these notions. The end can also be a beginning – perhaps of something new. The future is not simply determined by the past and there is therefore also room for hope.
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