Neftaly Explores Sculpture as Monuments of Collective Memory
Sculpture has always carried the weight of memory. Across cultures and centuries, it has stood as a language in stone, metal, and wood — a way for societies to honor their past, question their present, and imagine their future. At Neftaly, we explore sculpture not only as an artistic expression but as a monument of collective memory, shaping how communities remember and connect.
Monuments and public sculptures act as touchstones for shared experiences. They commemorate struggles and victories, honor lives lost, and embody values that endure across generations. These works are never just objects in space; they are living symbols that invite reflection, dialogue, and even debate.
Through its projects and initiatives, Neftaly engages with sculpture as a medium of remembrance and storytelling. We investigate how artists transform raw material into markers of identity, how form and scale influence public perception, and how collective memory is negotiated in the spaces where people gather.
By framing sculpture as a monument of memory, Neftaly encourages new conversations about heritage, community, and belonging. Our work highlights that these pieces are not frozen in the past, but rather evolving signposts — continually reinterpreted as societies change.
In exploring sculpture as monuments of collective memory, Neftaly reaffirms the role of art as a vessel of human experience, a keeper of stories, and a bridge between what was, what is, and what is yet to come.
