“Metal is alive long before I begin shaping it — I only reveal what it already wants to become.” — Rado Kirov
Working with stainless steel is often seen as mechanical or rigid. Yet, the material has its own temperament — a way of reflecting light, movement, and emotion that makes it feel alive. This is why it has become my primary artistic language.
A material that thinks in reflections
Stainless steel transforms every environment it enters. It mirrors the world, bends light, and changes depending on the viewer’s position. Every sculpture becomes a living object.

Where structure becomes fluid
Through pressure, heat, and controlled deformation, stainless steel can appear soft, melting, almost liquid. This tension between strength and delicacy defines much of my work.
A creative partnership with the material
Each piece begins with understanding how the metal wants to respond. Its behavior guides the design, allowing the sculpture to feel organic rather than forced.

2 Comments
Dorothy
Aquia sit amet, elitr, sed diam nonum eirmod tempor invidunt labore et dolore magna aliquyam.erat, sed diam voluptua.
Kevin
Dicta sunt explicabo. Nemo enim ipsam voluptatem voluptas odit aut fugit, sed quia consequuntur. Lorem ipsum nonum eirmod dolor.