



A rain-streaked veil of pigment descends like memory itself, softening the scene even as the hibiscus blooms insist on presence—white petals flaring against the bruised blues and mauves of the wall. The stark striped bench anchors the composition with a domestic, almost theatrical stillness, while a small tower of cups releases a flock of dark marks that read as thoughts escaping, or language finally taking flight. At the margin, the ornate clock hovers like a quiet witness, suggesting that time here is less measured than felt—caught between tenderness and erosion, between what is kept and what drips away.







