Magritte was primarily known as a painter, and his two-dimensional, canvas renditions of a cut-up female torso stacked like a set of Russian nesting dolls are famous. But this 5-foot-tall, 4-foot-wide sculpture may be more satisfying — viewers can walk around the sculpture and peer inside. They can examine the pitted texture on the artwork's interior. They can wonder what Magritte might have been saying by making the woman's hips more than twice as broad as her shoulders, and how they feel about that portrayal.