

A sprawling, smoke-veiled tableau unfolds like a collective memory mid-erasure, where bodies and architecture dissolve into one another and the eye is forced to navigate by instinct rather than certainty. Ink-like greys and bruised neutrals create a pressure of atmosphere, punctured by sudden eruptions of pinks, reds, and golds that read as signals—wounds, warnings, or brief survivals of joy—within an unsettled civic dream. The composition’s restless overlaps and fragmentary figures suggest a society caught between intimacy and surveillance, tenderness and collapse, as if the city itself were thinking through its own trauma in discontinuous flashes. What emerges is not a single narrative but a chorus of moments, each partially obscured, insisting that contemporary life is lived in simultaneity: seen, forgotten, and reassembled again.







