Editorial
What Holds the Wrist Also Extends Beyond It
You find the glass and the room behind it looks darker than the one you are standing in. The steel frame is at your left. The light comes from no single source. What remains visible is exactly what should be.

Radial geometry does not close around a center. It extends from one.
Five arms radiating from a single origin point. Two form the band that holds position at the wrist. Three extend outward, past the wrist's edge, into the space the arm occupies. Granulated texture covers every surface: individual raised points at differing angles, no two planes returning light identically. A form that states its own perimeter past the surface it rests on.

She sets her arm against the steel frame and the starfish arms read against the industrial grid behind them. The radial form makes the straight lines of the window into a reference. Both systems begin from a center. One was calculated. One was found.

Five radial arms. Two hold the wrist. Three extend beyond it. Granulated silver, no clasp, open at four point three centimeters.
You press your hand to the glass and the starfish arms catch the dim reflection beside them. The form has already claimed more space than the wrist it rests on. That is not ambition. That is geometry reaching its natural conclusion.
From the Collection

