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Not every storm arrives to destroy.
Some appear only after a direction has been found.
The waters here are restless, but they no longer belong to despair. The waves do not pull her under; they carry her forward. What once felt like chaos has become movement.
The blue is not calm. It is alive — holding both uncertainty and possibility. Across the surface, traces of gold emerge like brief flashes of light on moving water, evidence that hope has returned.…
For the first time, the storm is not an obstacle.
It is part of the journey.
As with all works in the Persona series, the figure originates from a life-cast of the artist's own face.
Deniz Ozyol is a Turkish mixed media artist working at the intersection of sculptural relief, painting, and material experimentation. Self-directed in her practice, she has developed a singular technique that sets her apart: three-dimensional face casts she takes directly from her own face, set in epoxy resin and embedded into acrylic-painted panels. The result is a body of work that is simultaneously painting and sculpture — raw, tactile, and deeply personal. Her ongoing series, Persona, takes its name from the Latin word for the masks worn in ancient theatre. Each work explores the tension between our inner world and the face we present to others — the constructed self versus the felt self. The faces that emerge from her canvases are neither fully revealed nor fully concealed. They surface. They resist. They haunt.