


The work stages a quiet, tensile dialogue between grounded labor and abstracted modern movement: two figures sit in an earthen, twig-choked atmosphere, their baskets and leaves rendered with tactile intimacy, while a stark teal roadway slices the composition into a second world of speed and anonymity. The contrast in palettes—mossy browns and muted greens against a clean, synthetic blue—turns color into ethics, asking what gets erased when progress arrives as a lane line and a queue of simplified vehicles. Their steady gazes and still hands become a form of endurance, a refusal to be flattened into the same schematic language that reduces city life to icons. In this split-stage space, time itself feels bifurcated: one side measured by touch and repetition, the other by acceleration, distance, and the impersonal rhythm of traffic.







