

In this painterly figure study, the womanβs turned back and folded limbs form a quiet spiral, drawing the eye into a private interior of breath and thought rather than outward spectacle. Warm, earthen ochres and smoky greens blur the boundary between body and ground, so that her red garment becomes the single pulse of insistenceβan ember of presence amid dissolving atmosphere. The loose, confident brushwork refuses hard outlines, suggesting memory more than documentation, and casting intimacy as something felt through touch, heat, and weight. What emerges is a meditation on solitude: a body both sheltered and exposed, held in the act of simply being.







