

A fevered interior unfolds like a collective dream, where bodies, animals, and half-erased figures crowd the room in overlapping planes, dissolving the boundary between private thought and lived space. The warm ochres and rusted reds press inward, while veils of smoke and translucent washes soften edges, turning gesture into atmosphere and making each vignette feel like a memory caught mid-breath. Hands clasping a head at the apex becomes the work’s quiet axis—an emblem of pressure, grief, or contemplation—around which the scene’s fractured narratives orbit like anxious satellites. In this compressed theatre of domesticity, tenderness and disturbance coexist, suggesting that intimacy is never singular but stitched from many presences, seen and unseen.