Lady in Twilight

$375.00
sold out

“Lady in Twilight” is a striking, one-of-a-kind portrait crafted entirely from glass and recycled scrap glass. Each shard is carefully selected and fused to create a harmonious blend of bold edges and soft, fluid forms.

A celebration of sustainability and creativity, this unique artwork offers both visual impact and a powerful narrative. Perfect for modern spaces, it’s a piece that speaks to the beauty of transformation and the unexpected elegance in imperfection. No two are the same.

Dimensions: approx 6” x 9”
Materials: Glass, recycled scrap glass, fused and shaped
Care Instructions: Gently wipe with a soft cloth. Handle with care due to the nature of the material.

“Lady in Twilight” is a striking, one-of-a-kind portrait crafted entirely from glass and recycled scrap glass. Each shard is carefully selected and fused to create a harmonious blend of bold edges and soft, fluid forms.

A celebration of sustainability and creativity, this unique artwork offers both visual impact and a powerful narrative. Perfect for modern spaces, it’s a piece that speaks to the beauty of transformation and the unexpected elegance in imperfection. No two are the same.

Dimensions: approx 6” x 9”
Materials: Glass, recycled scrap glass, fused and shaped
Care Instructions: Gently wipe with a soft cloth. Handle with care due to the nature of the material.

For me, this series is about the connection between fashion and self-expression. What we choose to wear, especially something as bold and symbolic as sunglasses, often says as much about us as what we hide. Each pair feels like a clue: playful, confident, ironic, sleek, eccentric. You don’t see the literal person, yet you recognize everything about them. I love the paradox in that. These faces are both anonymous and deeply familiar. The glass itself plays into that tension, it is fragile but sharp, reflective but solid, and it mirrors the contradictions of human identity in the digital age.

The work isn’t simply about sunglasses, it’s about the ongoing negotiation between appearance and essence. What do we choose to show? What do we guard? And how much can others really know about us based only on what we project outward?