

This work reads like an unearthed textile-map, where torn earthen planes and stitched, rhythmic dashes create a quiet archaeology of touch and time. Warm ochres and umbers pool and bleed like sediment, while the banded βseamsβ and laddered marks impose a gentle orderβsuggesting routes, repairs, and remembered boundaries rather than fixed geography. The tension between frayed edges and deliberate patterning turns the surface into a meditation on mending: how history is held together by repetition, labor, and the fragile persistence of mark-making.







