Still Warm, Good Bye

Category: Apparel

Still Warm, Good Bye explores the emotional weight that remains after separation through the relationship between the body and the garment. In this work, the void left by a relationship is not treated as a simple absence or emptiness, but as a dense emotional condition that continues to live within the body. Although the person is no longer present, the sensations, memories, and attachments connected to them remain on the posture of the body and the surface of clothing. The work is formed through a torso that resembles a human body and garments that wrap, support, and carry it. The torso becomes both the body of someone absent and the body that carries that absence. Clothing is no longer understood only as something to be worn; it becomes an emotional structure that holds, remembers, and releases another person. The body wears the garment, the garment preserves the trace of the body, and between them remains the residue of a relationship that has ended. What matters in this work is the warmth that remains after goodbye. Separation may appear cold, final, and disconnected, yet the emotions left behind do not cool down immediately. Longing, grief, attachment, and tenderness stay within the body and become layered over time. The void therefore does not remain purely negative. It slowly becomes a way of remembering someone who was once precious. Mud and patina appear as surfaces of this emotional transformation. Mud suggests the weight of feelings that have settled after separation, while the oxidised silver leaf records how those feelings change through time, colour, and reaction. What may first appear as dirt, damage, or loss becomes evidence that the relationship was real and that contact once existed. Still Warm, Good Bye is not about fully letting go of someone who has disappeared. It is about holding what remains in another form. The work transforms absence into a surface of memory, revealing a goodbye that is still warm.