



Two elongated figures occupy a hushed interior of fractured planes, their bodies rendered as quiet architectures that lean toward one another without fully meeting, as if intimacy must negotiate the weight of memory. A warm, earthen ground holds them in suspended time while cool, chalky blues and violets soften the edges of form, turning touch into a hesitant language rather than a declaration. The compressed space—stacked with doorlike rectangles and half-formed objects—reads like a mind assembling its own room, suggesting companionship as refuge and confinement in the same breath. In this tender imbalance, the painting proposes that closeness is not resolution, but a shared endurance shaped by the rooms we carry within us.







