

Suspended within a vast, earthen haze, the narrow façade reads like a remembered fragment of a dwelling—an architectural relic held upright by paint rather than by mortar. The artist compresses depth into a vertical incision, where a cool turquoise door and slivers of interior light puncture the ochres and greens, turning color into a quiet pulse of human presence. Around it, the softened field behaves like dust, time, and atmosphere at once, suggesting that what we call “home” is less a place than an accumulation of traces, sealed behind thresholds we sense more than we see.