

This work reads like a weathered wall of memory—its bruised greys and tar-like blacks layered over raw white, punctured by urgent red fields that feel both like warning signs and opened wounds. The composition is built from rough blocks and scraped passages, where splatters and abrasions operate as a kind of visual noise, suggesting erased messages, censored histories, or a city’s pulse seen through soot and static. Within the fractured surface, faint silhouettes and ghostly marks hover at the edge of legibility, turning the painting into an arena where human presence is implied rather than declared. The tension between control and rupture—hard rectangular partitions versus feral drips—creates a charged atmosphere of unrest, resilience, and collective aftermath.