

A nocturnal expanse unfolds in layered veils of charcoal and slate, where a bruised blue atmosphere presses down upon a dense, scintillating band of light. The painterly surface—scraped, stippled, and flecked with ember-like reds and whites—suggests a city seen through rain or memory, its signals breaking apart into pure sensation. This compressed horizon becomes a threshold between distance and intimacy, translating urban pulse into a quiet, almost cosmic hush where movement is felt more than described. In the tension between obscurity and glimmer, the work meditates on how modern life persists as fragments: reflections, afterimages, and brief survivals of warmth against the dark.







