



Bathed in a fevered field of oranges and reds, the figures gather around a glowing radio that becomes both hearth and oracle—its mechanical face radiating an intimate, borrowed light into a room otherwise made of quiet longing. The women’s closed eyes and folded hands suggest listening as a form of prayer, while their elongated bodies and simplified planes turn domestic life into a ritual of endurance and shared memory. Behind them, the faint geometry of repeated rooftops reads like a dissolving neighborhood—an echo of community held together not by walls but by transmitted voices. Even the small pinwheel of color at the edge feels like a fragile counterpoint to the warmth: a childlike insistence on play against the weight of waiting.







