

Contained within a perfect circle like a remembered scene held in the mind’s eye, the composition stages a small, fractured settlement behind a curtain of vertical blue strokes that read as rain, reeds, or a paling—simultaneously protective and obscuring. The saturated blues flatten space into a cool, aquatic atmosphere, while scattered reds and warm accents flicker as human presence, insisting on life amid a dominating field of quiet. A banded, gridded foreground suggests measurement, shoreline, or coded distance, turning the landscape into a kind of map where intimacy and separation coexist. What emerges is a meditation on visibility: how place becomes legible only in fragments, and how memory edits the world into rhythm, interruption, and luminous restraint.







