Artemis
216 x 74 x 50 cm, © 2025,
€ 7 900,00
Three-dimensional | Sculpture | Mixed Media
On display at The Summer of Wechel
It began with an unexpected encounter in the forest.
A roe deer appeared on my path, paused, and looked back —
as if sensing something approaching, invisible yet present.
We stood still. Together. Connected.
In that moment, the boundary between worlds seemed to part.
Softness and instinct. Silence and strength.
Later, I found Artemis in mythology:
goddess of the moon, of nature and the hunt, protector of the feminine.
According to an ancient tale, she transformed herself into a chestnut tree,
to escape the desire of Zeus.
Not out of fear, but from a deep connection to herself and the earth.
An act of resistance and surrender, a merging of body, tree, and freedom.
This sculpture was born from that —
from the meeting of the animal that looked at me
and the goddess who became root.
A being that is neither solely human nor animal,
but both. And more.
The rough, earthy textures at the base anchor the work,
while the upper part rises soft and transparent —
an antler with two moons gently swaying between realms.
Artemis embodies the moment when boundaries fade:
between skin and bark, instinct and silence, strength and vulnerability.
Not a portrait, but a remembrance of who we truly are —
in transformation, in connection,
part of something greater than ourselves.
Monumental sculpture, suitable for outdoor use
Materials: pigmented acrylic resin, epoxy clay, bronze and iron powders, acrylic paint, and seal coating
Theme: transformation between human, animal, and nature



