



This work stages a tense crossing between innocence and collapse: a child, rendered in warm, living color, steps forward while a larger, ghostly adult figure emerges from a ground of newsprint and fissured earth, as if society itself were made of brittle headlines and erosion. The composition splits light and matter—lush palm fronds and flesh glow against monochrome rubble—so that hope reads not as comfort but as a stubborn flare within an environment of scarcity and waste. Collaged fragments about water, debris, and public proclamations become a muted chorus, suggesting that language and policy are torn skin over deeper fractures. In the child’s upward gaze and the adult’s downward attention, the painting holds a quiet indictment: the future is asked to walk through the consequences of what the present has normalized.







