Marc De Corte Belg, 1974
Wall sculpture
4 3/8 x 21 1/4 x 3 in
Each letter size is bout 10 - 15cm
Words can be also personalized
Gesamtkunstwerk: sculpture + original drawing by artist with his signature for one letter of choice
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There is a quiet poetry in the wall sculpture “Family” by Marc De Corte—a poetry that speaks not through words, but through bodies suspended in space. Each figure, poised in a moment of balance, tension, or surrender, becomes a letter in an unspoken language. Together, they compose something deeply human: the fragile, powerful architecture of belonging.
In this work, the human body is no longer just a form—it becomes emotion made visible. One figure stretches outward, reaching. Another bends, grounded yet vulnerable. A third stands still, centered, almost meditative. And then there is the leap—the daring, weightless trust that defines connection. These are not just poses; they are states of being. They echo the roles we inhabit within a family: the supporter, the dreamer, the protector, the one who falls, and the one who rises again.
What makes “Family” so moving is its silent truth: that family is not uniformity, but harmony within difference. Each figure stands alone, yet none exists without the others. There is distance, but also invisible threads—tension, love, memory—binding them into a whole.
To collect “Family” is to invite a mirror into one’s space—a reflection of one’s own story. It resonates with anyone who has loved, lost, grown, or belonged. It offers not decoration, but meaning. A collector does not simply acquire this work; they recognize themselves within it. It becomes a daily reminder of connection, resilience, and the beauty of human bonds.
A sense of calm, of introspection. A quiet gratitude. Sometimes even a gentle ache—the kind that reminds us of what truly matters. It holds both strength and tenderness, like family itself.
Place it where life unfolds—above a sofa, in a living room, or along a hallway that connects spaces. It thrives where people gather, where movement and presence echo its own silent choreography.
