



Suspended in a pale, breath-like field, the fish becomes a quiet emblem of passage—an organism rendered as both specimen and memory, held in place by looping calligraphic strokes that read like tethering lines or currents. Translucent washes and graphite smudges build a layered space where the body’s silhouette casts a ghost of itself, suggesting how perception doubles what it cannot fully grasp. Around this central form, faint vegetal marks and fragmentary textures imply an ecology of traces—life, residue, and observation interlaced—so the composition oscillates between stillness and subtle drift. The work’s restrained monochrome turns light into an ethical lens, inviting contemplation of fragility, containment, and the thin boundary between living presence and archival record.







