

A faceless head emerges from a collision of paint, collage, and abrasion, as if identity is being assembled and erased in the same breath. The composition fractures into blocks of soot-black, urgent red, and electric blue, where scraped textures and half-legible fragments read like urban residueβmemory, media, and noise pressed into the surface. Light is not painted so much as excavated: pale vertical veils cut across the visage, turning the figure into a screen for projection rather than a portrait. The work holds a tense, contemporary melancholy, suggesting a self caught between public signage and private silence, perpetually interrupted yet insistently present.







