

This dreamlike tableau stages a quiet domestic exile beneath an exaggerated sun, where a striped sofa becomes both refuge and theater, anchoring the scene against a vast, bruised-lilac field of textured silence. Above it, magnolia-like blooms erupt in improbable suspension—lush, weightless thoughts—softening the austerity of the setting while insisting on tenderness as a form of resistance. The small dog and the solitary vessel at the edge of a dark, receding plank read like sentinels of loyalty and departure, suggesting that comfort is never fixed but negotiated between longing and the possibility of leaving. Light is treated less as illumination than as emotion: a warm disc that doesn’t explain the space, but consecrates its melancholy with a strangely hopeful radiance.







