
Visage 19
In her ongoing Visage series, begun in 2015, artist Leigh Wells examines the limits of perception and the elusive nature of interior life. The work stems from a central question: how much of another’s inner world—or even our own—can ever be fully understood? What is revealed, what is withheld, and what remains unknowable despite our attempts to look closely? Through this lens, the series becomes a meditation on consciousness, exploring the impossibility of fully entering another mind and the shifting, partial understanding we hold of ourselves.
Wells constructs her portraits through layered mixed-media collage, combining found materials with fragments drawn from classical sculpture. Isolated eyes, softened profiles, and incomplete features act not as historical citations but as open spaces—sites for projection, interpretation, and emotional resonance. In their intentional incompleteness, the works reflect the inherent limits of seeing and knowing. This new grouping of seven pieces adopts a more restrained and contemplative tone, with a muted palette and rectilinear compositions that heighten a sense of quiet tension. Within these carefully bounded forms, Wells invites viewers into a space of reflection, where the full story remains deliberately just out of reach.
Original: $370.00
-65%$370.00
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Description
In her ongoing Visage series, begun in 2015, artist Leigh Wells examines the limits of perception and the elusive nature of interior life. The work stems from a central question: how much of another’s inner world—or even our own—can ever be fully understood? What is revealed, what is withheld, and what remains unknowable despite our attempts to look closely? Through this lens, the series becomes a meditation on consciousness, exploring the impossibility of fully entering another mind and the shifting, partial understanding we hold of ourselves.
Wells constructs her portraits through layered mixed-media collage, combining found materials with fragments drawn from classical sculpture. Isolated eyes, softened profiles, and incomplete features act not as historical citations but as open spaces—sites for projection, interpretation, and emotional resonance. In their intentional incompleteness, the works reflect the inherent limits of seeing and knowing. This new grouping of seven pieces adopts a more restrained and contemplative tone, with a muted palette and rectilinear compositions that heighten a sense of quiet tension. Within these carefully bounded forms, Wells invites viewers into a space of reflection, where the full story remains deliberately just out of reach.























