



Set within two bark-like medallions, the work stages a quiet cosmology where the dome of sky becomes a porous membrane—studded with seed-forms and suspended pins—pressing down upon a patchwork of human and natural terrains. The stippled monochrome surface reads like a patient act of mapping: roads, dwellings, fields, and textures interlock as if memory itself were being archived in cells, suggesting how landscape is organized by both necessity and imagination. The burnt umber border holds these worlds like relics, lending the drawings the authority of specimens—at once scientific and devotional—while the repeated circular format invites comparison, as though two parallel ecologies are being weighed for their fragility and endurance.







