

Set against a field of ochres and bruised gold, a reclining figure is rendered as a dense, shadowed silhouette—less a body than a quiet weight of presence—while translucent planes slide above like veils of memory or architecture. The composition stages a tension between containment and exposure: hard-edged geometry corrals the form, yet the scraped, luminous color breaks through in scattered embers, suggesting thought flickering beneath stillness. Light here is not descriptive but psychological, turning the space into an interior landscape where rest becomes a kind of endurance and the horizon reads as both shelter and threshold.







