MUSKOVIT
“The moment of brightest light is the moment of dissolution.”
At the city’s edge, stone and water whisper in an endless rhythm. Each wave leaves a trace, each rock slowly dissolves. A glimmer is born only to fade. Abrasion writes its script with nature’s invisible pen — a language of patience, time, and disappearance. This installation, MUSKOVIT, resembles the mineral it is named after: a being that peels away layer by layer, able to hold light only for a moment. Reflective surfaces carry the brilliance of an instant, yet everything that shines has already begun to vanish.
The circular arrangement of stones follows the sea’s eternal cycle — a movement without beginning or end. Each stone stands as a fragment, a memory detached from another. Muscovite is not something that rises, but something that diminishes. It lightens with time, finding meaning as it loses its brightness. The viewer is invited into this process: to look beyond radiance toward transience, to listen closely to the line between the patience of stone and the voice of water. Perhaps what shines the brightest is what stands on the verge of disappearance, and every dissolution is the beginning of a new glimmer.