

This intricate monochrome drawing reads like a cartography of memory, where handwritten notations, patterned fields, and ornamental motifs converge into a single, meditative terrain. At its center, a lone figure slices the water with an elongated, almost weightless descent—an axis of vulnerability that contrasts with the obsessive precision of the surrounding marks. The sea’s repetitive striations and the dense lattice of flora and architectural geometry suggest a world measured, classified, and controlled, yet constantly undone by the fluid rhythms of nature. In the tension between diagram and dream, the work becomes a quiet allegory of how we attempt to map the ineffable—time, belonging, and the self—onto landscapes that refuse to stay still.







