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Other details :
Artwork on cardboard. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
25.6x19.7in
About this artwork
This work explores the distortion of memory and identity.
The face appears present, yet partially blocked, as if something has been placed over it—intentionally or by force.
A physical element interrupts the surface,
not as decoration, but as a barrier.
It prevents full recognition, suggesting that memory is never complete, never fully accessible.
The raised hand intensifies this tension.
It can be read as protection, refusal, or an attempt to hold… something back.
Red surrounds the form like a boundary—
a mark of both violence and existence.
This figure is not clearly defined as a person.
It exists as a fragmented presence,
where identity is layered, damaged, and continuously reconstructed.
Masanobu Oda is a Japanese contemporary artist using ballpoint pen, gesso, and charcoal, with a background marked by personal loss that shapes her deeply introspective practice. Her technique layers instinctive, chance-driven pen lines with gesso, then disrupts them with white, manipulation, and alcohol, creating haunting fragments that hover between abstraction and figuration. Her art radiates silent intensity, expressing grief, forgiveness, and prayer, inviting viewers to witness vulnerability and the slow healing of memory.