Gil Bruvel’s latest wooden sculptures feel less like objects and more like quiet revelations.
Crafted from hundreds of precisely cut sticks, each piece blurs into fluid, serene faces when viewed from afar. Up close, the raw texture of wood—grain, knots, even gaps—adds emotional depth and tactile richness. Bruvel intentionally leaves sections imperfect or fragmented, allowing vulnerability to emerge as a central theme. These subtle absences invite reflection on our own incompleteness, reminding us that beauty lies in the broken. His work is rooted in discipline, not fleeting inspiration—he shows up every day, carving form from routine. Influenced by Vipassana meditation and his visit to Cambodia’s Angkor Wat, his faces radiate stillness and spiritual weight. One standout, “The Well,” won acclaim for symbolizing the flow and importance of clean water in global aid efforts. Bruvel’s past in cabinetmaking gives him a unique command of material and form, combining craftsmanship with existential inquiry. In every piece, he carves a sense of interconnectedness—between time, nature, and what it means to be human.
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