



A veil of mossy greens and sun-dusted ochres blankets the surface like aged parchment, turning the picture plane into a slow, meditative field where time feels sedimented rather than linear. Within this softened atmosphere, faint orbs and scattered glyphs—triangles, zigzags, stitched lines—behave like memories rising and sinking, their muted accents of coral and turquoise offering brief pulses of lived experience. The composition reads as a vertical map of inner terrain, where playful notation and near-erased marks negotiate between innocence and erosion, suggesting that meaning is not declared but patiently excavated. Even the hinted faces and circular forms feel less like portraits than guardians of a private cosmology, holding the viewer in a quiet tension between recognition and disappearance.







