

Rendered in spare ink and velvety washes, the figure emerges less as a portrait than as a choreography of absenceβan anonymous head and buoyant arms suspended above concentric shadows that read like ripples, skirts, or stages of becoming. The restrained monochrome amplifies the tension between control and release: delicate dotted arcs and linear gestures suggest movement traced in memory, while the deep, pooled blacks anchor the body to a gravity that feels emotional rather than physical. In this quiet orbit of forms, identity dissolves into sensation, as if the self is held together by rhythm, repetition, and the soft insistence of gesture.







