



This diptych unfolds like a remembered landscape seen through mist and motion, where slate greys and violet shadows are interrupted by sudden ember-orange planes that read as both ruptures and beacons. The composition balances weighty, grounded diagonals with a distant, softened horizon, suggesting a terrain shifting between stability and fracture, between architecture and earth. Light is not depicted as a source but as an atmosphere—thin washes that veil the forms—so the viewer is drawn into a contemplative space where presence feels provisional and time seems weathered into the surface. In the tension between blurred expanses and sharp, scraped marks, the work intimates resilience: a quiet insistence of heat and life persisting within a cool, uncertain world.







