

This diptych stages abstraction as a memory apparatus: translucent veils of pigment and looping calligraphic traces drift over submerged forms, as if the image were repeatedly written and partially erased. The left panel’s earthen umbers and muted golds feel like sediment and time—warm, bruised, and intimate—while the right panel cools into green-gray light, where pale, hovering planes read like fragments of illumination caught under water. Across both, the layered glazing and restless linework compress depth into a shallow, vibrating field, suggesting an interior landscape where perception wavers between clarity and concealment. The work ultimately speaks to the duality of recollection—how the same experience can oxidize into warmth or resolve into spectral calm, depending on the light we hold it under.







