traditionally a container, is redefined as an object shaped by external pressure, no longer defined by what it holds but by what is imposed upon it. The presence of the stone disrupts its autonomy, pressing against it, altering its form, and leaving its mark on the surface. This interaction is not passive the vessel absorbs the force, its texture reflecting the weight it endures, questioning whether it is adapting, resisting, or simply bearing the imprint of what shapes it. The balance between vessel and stone becomes a negotiation between force and fragility, presence and absence, revealing how objects, like bodies and histories, carry the traces of external forces that shape them over time.
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