At the threshold between vessel, stone, and archaeological fragment, this tinted glass sculpture seems to have been extracted from a mineral landscape. Its rough, almost sedimentary surface contrasts with the violet depth of its crystalline core, as though the material had opened to reveal a secret formation.
The form retains the memory of a vase, yet moves beyond it: the object is no longer a container, but an apparition. The cavity, filled with glass reliefs, evokes a geode in formation — a luminous core held within an ancient envelope. Glass is treated here as both a fragile and telluric material, blurring the boundaries between artifice and nature.
The outer texture gives the piece a quiet, almost fossil-like presence. It places the work within a long sense of time, as if it carried the traces of excavation, slow transformation, and an accident turned into an inner landscape.
With its 15 cm height, this sculpture may be presented on its own, as a contemporary cabinet piece, or placed in dialogue with other works exploring matter, ruin, and metamorphosis.
A unique piece, where the vessel becomes mineral, and the opening reveals an architecture of light.


















