Object of Desire
Not only about how we’re seen — also what it means to want, and to be wanted. Through thought, feeling, form.
“Object of Desire” isn’t just about appearance or attraction. It’s about the space that desire occupies — the pull towards something, someone, somewhere. The hunger that lives in me: for work, for meaning, for connection, for life itself. The fantasies, insecurities, and contradictions that shape how we move through the world. The decayed mirror and the writing hold that tension between beauty and damage, between control and vulnerability.
It’s about confronting those hidden layers of wanting — seeing them clearly, even when it’s uncomfortable. Realizing that desire is as much about our minds as our bodies, as much about projection as truth.
I guess this comes from a place of wanting — a deep thirst for things in life, for creation, for momentum, for the rawness of being seen and feeling alive and fulfilled
anyways from me to me.
Mirror, chemically and physically altered, spray paint, mdf board, 2025