

This work stages a confrontation between saturated ochres and an engulfing nocturnal field, where light feels less like illumination than a residue—scraped, dripped, and half-buried in the surface. Fragmentary marks and torn-edged planes hover like memory-shards, suggesting an urban or industrial presence that has been weathered into abstraction. The composition breathes through its ruptures: dense dark passages compress the space while pale, flickering accents open brief corridors of clarity, as if perception is continually negotiating what can be held and what must disappear. In that tension, the painting becomes a meditation on aftermath—beauty emerging not in spite of erosion, but through it.