

This diptych of mask-like visages feels excavated rather than painted—faces emerging from an earthen ground as if memory itself were a weathered wall. The strict frontal symmetry fractures into asymmetry through incision-like lines and dotted, ritual markings, turning portraiture into an archaeology of identity where the human is filtered through totem and talisman. Ocher and soot-black tones compress the space into a dense, intimate plane, while the wide, unwavering eyes hold the viewer in a tense exchange—at once watchful, wounded, and ceremonial. In its tactile abrasions and stitched textures, the work suggests a narrative of concealment and survival: the self as something protected, scarified, and carried forward through symbols.







