Elm Sculpture

€340,00

Elm Wood Sculpture – Estebanland X Vicode
A gesture, a form, a function.

Born from the encounter between art and everyday life, this solid elm wood sculpture by Estebanland is a work that welcomes the gaze and the space. Entirely hand-sculpted, each curve tells an intuition, each fiber reveals time and matter.

The artist is not content to create beauty: he transforms it into presence. Designed to live in homes, this sculpture is a poetic but functional object. It can be used as a centerpiece, as an elegant fruit bowl, or simply admired in its silent harmony.

Its ascending tips evoke a rising moon, a curved embrace, a refuge. A radical chic work, sculpted with bourgeois elegance, which holds the strength of nature and the lightness of the dream.

A unique piece, to touch, inhabit, contemplate.

Product Description

Hand carved elm wood sculpture.

Size & Weight

Size:

39 x 28 x 20 cm.
15.35 x 11.02 x 7.87 in.

Weight:

3.4 kg
7.5 lbs

Shipping

Free Shipping in Italy for orders over €50!
All domestic orders are shipped within 5 business days, with fast and safe delivery.

International shipping available. Delivery times vary by destination.

Object Care

Stephen Puzzuli

Wood, memory, metamorphosis

Stefano Puzzuoli is an Italian sculptor who transforms fragments of forgotten nature into objects full of poetry and memory. His wooden vases, made from felled trunks, prunings or wood destined for the fire, are living works: small three-dimensional haiku that speak of time, transformation and imperfect beauty.

Sculptures born from the forest

His creative process begins in the woods of Tuscany, where he personally collects each piece, guided by instinct and observation. Each trunk, marked by mushrooms, moss or insects, is chosen for its invisible history. The artist does not impose forms, but listens to them emerge: veins, cracks, organic traces become protagonists.

An aesthetics of authenticity

The vases are not functional objects, but containers of experiences. Compact or fractured, smooth or furrowed by deep cracks, they reveal a unique relationship between matter and gesture, interior and exterior, life and memory. Imperfections are not erased, but exalted as precious signs of time.

Artist's Manifesto

“My job is to listen to the wood. I don’t transform it: I give it a voice.”