


This work stages a dreamlike dialogue between geometry and memory, where bold scarlets and oceanic blues are pressed into stained-glass compartments that both reveal and conceal. A crescent-like arc cradles a miniature city, as if the built world were being held inside a private orbit, while the circular forms read as lenses—tools for searching, measuring, and re-seeing one’s own inner landscape. The jagged crown of triangles at the top sharpens the atmosphere into a vigilant skyline, and the scumbled textures suggest time’s abrasion—places becoming palimpsests rather than fixed destinations. In its layered transparency, the painting turns perception into architecture, proposing that what we call “outside” is always filtered through intimate, shifting light.







