Bones of Becoming

B*TCH CHAOS · Work VI of VI

$175.00

Work

Emergence through integration, not repair. Bones of Becoming positions imperfection as system. The composition is anchored on a single female figure whose exaggerated hair and layered form express structural negotiation. Fragmentation and alignment coexist to illustrate a resolved state within ongoing pressure.

The piece concludes the series’ progression, moving from internal collapse (Work I) through recursive fixation and observation (Works II–III) toward structural synthesis. Imperfection is formalized as a condition of emergence rather than a flaw to correct.

Series Context

B*TCH CHAOS is a six-part investigation of psychological pressure as architecture. Each work isolates a condition: constriction, visibility, fragmentation, recursion, collapse, residue, and rendered through a unified formal methodology.

Individual works operate autonomously; the series functions as an integrated system. Work VI demonstrates the series’ terminal logic: accumulation of prior conditions synthesized into structural integration. Ownership of this work situates a collector at the series’ conceptual apex.

Printed on Japanese museum-grade matte paper using archival water-based inkjet processes. The non-reflective surface preserves tonal fidelity and material integrity.

Each print is produced individually. The artist’s digital signature is embedded within the image file.

Open edition. The format reflects the artist’s commitment to circulation and engagement during the formative phase of the practice. Early acquisition positions collectors within a foundational body of work as it enters wider visibility.

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This work is suited to collectors building positions in contemporary practices where psychological structure operates as formal subject; serialized image-making systems in which method supersedes individual gesture; and rigorously conceptual approaches to figurative abstraction.

It is not decorative. It does not resolve. It sustains pressure as both subject and method.