Description: This curved sculpture, resembling a question mark, evokes the human spirit entangled in doubt and inquiry. Its rough texture, inward bend, and absence of a final dot symbolize the arduous path of questioning. The piece stands as a tribute to living within doubt—finding dignity not in answers, but in the pursuit itself.
At first glance, this piece resembles a question mark—
but not the kind you see in books.
Here, the question is alive, carved from wood, wounded, textured, and incomplete.
Instead of a final dot, something appears to be missing—eroded, withheld, or never formed.
Question as Form
The sculpture’s curved structure, flowing softly inward, echoes a thought in motion—
not linear, not definitive.
The raw wooden texture reveals the pain of doubt—
of choosing to live inside uncertainty, rather than surrendering to easy answers.
It does not speak answers.
It becomes the question.
And in doing so, it does not instruct, but provokes reflection, hesitation, silence.
The Missing Dot
There is no period at the end of this question.
Perhaps it was lost. Perhaps it never existed.
Its absence is not accidental—
it is the essence of skepticism’s path: infinite, wearing, but deeply true.
A Tribute to the Skeptic Mind
This sculpture speaks of a mind that does not settle.
That mistrusts certainty.
That considers every answer a doorway to a new uncertainty.
Its upright form appears not to stand still,
but to be constantly bending, considering, evolving.
Final Thought
To Live in Questioning does not teach how to stand tall—
it honors the art of bending, of pausing, of sacred doubt.
In a world obsessed with fabricated truths,
this piece invites us back to the question—
one without an answer, but full of integrity



