

Set against a weathered field of ochres and bruised reds, the figure sits in a hush that feels both domestic and exposed, her clasped hands and small bag reading as an anchor in a world that offers no certainty. The scattered, crumpled papers—each punctured by a vivid blot of pigment—operate like involuntary confessions, fragments of correspondence where feeling has seeped through and stained the surface. By pushing the characters to the margins and letting negative space dominate, the composition turns absence into a palpable presence, suggesting the quiet violence of distance: what is left unsaid, and what returns anyway. The work’s restrained realism, softened by a mural-like patina, makes memory feel public—pressed onto a wall—while the color wounds insist that intimacy cannot be neatly folded away.







