



Immersed in a field of saturated cerulean, the work stages a suspended eruption of gesture—ink-like scars and splintered marks that feel less painted than weathered into being, as if memory has abraded the surface. The diptych format becomes a psychological hinge: one panel offers vast, aqueous silence while the other compresses a denser, spectral presence, its pale verticals flickering like figures caught between emergence and dissolution. Light is not depicted so much as excavated from within the pigment, where bruised violets and smoky blacks suggest both depth and aftermath. The overall sensation is of a threshold—between calm and disturbance, clarity and obscurity—inviting the viewer to read absence as narrative and stain as testimony.







