

Suspended in a field of velvety black, the form unfurls like a cross‑section of remembered terrain—striated layers and checkered tessellations reading as both geological sediment and the patterned labor of human habitation. The composition’s long horizontal thrust creates a quiet, inexorable drift, while the alternation of soft tonal gradients and crisp linear bands turns emptiness into a charged atmosphere rather than a void. In this restrained monochrome, light becomes an act of excavation: it reveals how landscape is never purely natural, but stitched together from time, touch, and the repeating rhythms of lived experience.







