

This diptych sets a stark dialogue between habitation and erasure: on the left, an austere, inked façade—its barred windows and roughened surfaces—presses forward like a memory too heavy to ignore. Opposite it, a blush field of scraped, scumbled texture reads as a tender yet bruised afterimage, where presence dissolves into traces and scars. The shared, house-like silhouette binds the two panels into a single architecture of feeling, suggesting that behind every structure lies an equally potent void—what is concealed, lost, or quietly endured. In the tension between hard line and abraded color, the work becomes a meditation on confinement, resilience, and the fragile persistence of place.







