



This painting unfolds like a close-up of an eroded landscape or a remembered body, where broad planes of blush, clay, and umber are pushed and scraped into existence, making the surface feel simultaneously tender and geological. Diagonal strata carve the composition into shifting terraces, guiding the eye through pockets of shadow that read as quiet rupturesβmoments where time, pressure, and emotion have left their mark. Light is not depicted so much as absorbed and exhaled by the pigment, creating a muted radiance that suggests intimacy rather than spectacle. In its refusal of fixed subject, the work becomes a meditation on formation: how warmth, wear, and fracture can coexist as a single, evolving presence.







