Time Flies When You're Having Fun
- Materials
- Thermoset Polymer And Aluminium
- Edition size
- Edition of 18 + 4 AP
- Dimensions
- 156w x 45h x 15d (cm)

At its core, the artist's work is not merely a sculpture but a profound exploration of life, death, and what might come after. The piece draws upon the hauntingly enigmatic anamorphic skull found in Hans Holbein the Younger’s renowned 16th-century painting, "The Ambassadors", seeking to delve into our intricate relationship with mortality.Holbein's skull, warped and stretched across the bottom of the canvas, only coalesces into a recognizable form when viewed from a particular angle. Similarly, the artist's sculpture may invite viewers to perceive death not as a stark, unequivocal end but as something that can be seen and understood in myriad ways depending upon one’s perspective.The sculpture underscores an enthralling dichotomy: the palpable, tangible skull representative of death, and the elusive, unfathomable questions regarding what follows our mortal existence. It doesn’t propound a singular truth about death or afterlife but rather urges viewers to embark on a reflective journey into the abyss of their own beliefs and apprehensions.A philosophical thread woven through the piece suggests that death might not be a mere binary opposite of life, not just an abrupt cessation. Instead, if one embraces the concept of an afterlife or a spiritual realm, death could be envisioned as a transformative passage. It isn't a leap from being to non-being, but a continual shift from one state of energy to another, a metamorphosis that’s perhaps as unfathomable as an anamorphic skull that only reveals itself fully from a specific viewpoint.The artist, in fashioning this piece, creates a space where viewers might ponder about the fluidity between life and death, physicality and spirituality. It tacitly nudges the observer to contemplate: If death is not an end, but a transformation, how does that shape our understanding of life itself? What implications might it hold for how we live, love, and forge connections with others?This philosophical artwork does not endeavor to dictate answers. Rather, it gracefully unfolds a space, a moment in time, wherein observers may dwell, question, and perhaps leave with more inquiries than they arrived with—continuing the timeless human tradition of exploring the elusive mysteries shrouding our existence.


