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Uncropped master image of Time Collection Series III showing a marble sculpture wearing a complex pin-object that reflects the fragmentation and instability of time.

TIME COLLECTION
SERIES III — The Fracture of Duration

If Series I was awakening
and Series II was appearance,
Series III is rupture.
Here, time no longer flows as a line, nor presents itself as ceremony. It fractures, multiplies, folds in on itself. Duration is exposed as unstable — composed of interruptions, overlaps, and moments that refuse to align.
This is the Proustian crisis: the instant when memory stops obeying chronology. Past and present collide. Seconds expand, years collapse. Time ceases to be trusted.
In Series III, the object is no longer an emblem — it becomes a mechanism. Gears, rotations, crossings, and radial forms appear. The jewelry does not represent time; it behaves like time.
This is the most turbulent act of the collection.
First Compression

Pin (medal-object), applied arts – jewellery design
Florence, 2010–2011

Time contracts. Experience is no longer expansive but condensed, carrying intensity within reduced space. Memory becomes compact and charged.

Circular Recall

Pin (medal-object), applied arts – jewellery design
Florence, 2010–2011

Time returns upon itself. The piece evokes recurrence, suggesting that memory does not progress forward but loops inward.

Structural Core

Pin (medal-object), applied arts – jewellery design
Florence, 2010–2011

At the center, complexity stabilizes. This object proposes time as an engineered construct, held together by internal coherence rather than surface order.

Internal Architecture

Pin (medal-object), applied arts – jewellery design
Florence, 2010–2011

Time reveals its inner scaffolding. Mechanism and memory merge, exposing duration as something built, assembled, and sustained.


Crossed Temporal Axes

Pin (medal-object), applied arts – jewellery design
Florence, 2010–2011

Multiple directions intersect. Past, present, and anticipation coexist, denying linear progression and embracing simultaneity.

Encumbered Measure

Pin (medal-object), applied arts – jewellery design
Florence, 2010–2011

Time bears weight. The object acknowledges duration as something carried—sometimes heavy, sometimes resistant, never neutral.

Mechanical Memory

Pin (medal-object), applied arts – jewellery design
Florence, 2010–2011

The series concludes with memory rendered mechanical. Time is no longer abstract; it is operational, internalized, and persistent.