Inspired by an imagined episode from the life of Bernard de Mandeville, this installation reflects on the fragile relationship between power, accident, and consequence. A minor domestic incident — a spilled cup of tea, an interrupted gesture, an expression fixed in a portrait — becomes the starting point for a meditation on chance and the invisible chain of events set in motion by every human action.

At the center of the work is a scaled plaster interior: a vaulted room, an entrance, a half-open door, and a functioning chandelier illuminating the scene. Within this suspended and silent space stands a wax figure, motionless at the foot of a staircase, one hand extended in an ambiguous gesture of request or supplication.

Balancing between theatricality and stillness, the installation evokes a world where collapse never fully arrives, yet absence and misfortune quietly persist. The domestic setting becomes a metaphorical architecture of power, uncertainty, and unresolved expectation.

Viewing by appointment only.