Wait for Me, I think I’m Worth it

2026, Resin and Mixed Media

A bunny (mostly) in a box.

This work is built on the tension between containment and self-possession. Encased within a translucent resin box, the figure of the bunny girl—part icon, part archetype—presses outward, her limbs extending toward the boundaries that surround her. The bunny embodies a form of female sexualized power: confident, unapologetic, and fully aware of the space she occupies.

The resin enclosure becomes a metaphor for the pressures placed upon that identity. It represents the expectations, assumptions, and projections imposed from the outside. Depending on where the viewer stands, the figure can appear either confined or commanding, her body stable, but what defines her shifts.

Within this tension lies the work’s central question: is she trapped by the box, or defining it? The bunny’s posture suggests resolve rather than surrender. Even within constraint, she asserts presence and strength—owning both her image and the power attributed to it.