



This diptych stages a horizon of fractured greens against a vast, incandescent amber sky, where the land seems to rise and dissolve in the same breath. Scraped, nervous marks and glancing highlights suggest trees and distant structures only as fleeting impressions, as if memory itself were being reassembled across the seam between panels. The oppressive warmth of the upper field reads like both blessing and warning—an atmosphere that saturates everything, turning the landscape into a meditation on endurance, erosion, and the way light can beautify even as it consumes. In its split composition, the work asks the eye to stitch continuity from rupture, echoing how we navigate terrain—physical or emotional—through partial, shifting truths.







