


A studio self-portrait unfolds as a quiet confrontation between presence and dissolution: the painter stands in crisp, cool shadow, while the canvas behind him swallows a reclining figure into a field of bruised reds, as if memory is being edited in real time. The composition pivots on this contrast—blue against vermilion, solidity against blur—so that the artist’s hand-on-hip resolve feels less like confidence than an effort to anchor himself amid slipping narratives. Brushes, palette, and a half-seen easel form a modest altar to process, suggesting that creation here is not celebration but a tense negotiation with intimacy, absence, and the ethics of looking.







