



Across this grid of small panels, the imagery flickers between animal, body, and shadow, as if memory were rehearsing itself in fragments and refusing a single stable form. Sooty blacks and bruised reds smear into granular whites, creating a weathered atmosphere where figures emerge and recede like impulses—instinctual, half-seen, and emotionally charged. The repetition of similar motifs in varying orientations reads like a sequence of sensations rather than narrative, turning the series into a study of metamorphosis: tenderness and menace, play and erosion, held in the same trembling mark. In this way the work becomes less about depicting creatures than about registering presence—how life is sensed, scratched, and briefly caught before it dissolves back into ground.







