In sacred art, love flows through the alphabet of beauty, striving to reveal the invisible—to represent what cannot be expressed in any other way. I communicate through the subtle alphabet of sculpture, so that mystery and mystery become tangible.
Sacred art calls for transcendence. It seems to hurt, reaching deep inside us and asking questions about meaning. It is real when it touches our existential depths, filling our hearts with joy, emotion, tears, even pain; it rarely brings about ecstasy and sometimes ecstasy, though less often. Each work raises questions about meaning, which become a challenge, inspiring us to think about life in a new way.
This experience engages the whole person: sight, touch, mind, and heart, connecting us with the mystery that reveals itself in life but always surpasses it in its greatness.
When I create before the Mystery, I do not seek to enclose the invisible, mysterious, eternal, and infinite in a concrete form. I do not want to make an idol out of it, but rather to open up a space where spiritual experience becomes tangible, possible to encounter and experience in the depths of the heart.