

A monumental, mask-like figure gathers a smaller body into a single, enclosing silhouette, turning tenderness into something weighty and inevitable. Against a hushed grey field punctuated by faint, almost mnemonic symbols, saturated reds and yellows flare like emotional wounds—life-force, appetite, and alarm—while patterned orbs and folded, fan-like forms suggest the mind’s attempt to order what is unspeakable. The composition’s curved containment reads as both cradle and trap, where intimacy becomes a negotiation between protection and possession, and the private ritual of care is shadowed by quiet unease. In this suspended space, the figures feel less like individuals than archetypes of longing, endurance, and the fragile geometry of attachment.







