

Rendered in velvety charcoal monochrome, the figure is pressed into an arched, almost confessional frame where the body’s horizontal bands read like both garment and cage, measuring time in quiet, repetitive pulses. Her hands cup the face not as ornament but as a barricade, turning touch into containment as the eyes hover between resignation and inner vigilance. The light catches the cheekbones and collarbone like a small insistence of dignity against the surrounding smudged atmosphere, suggesting a psyche seeking clarity while the world blurs at its edges. In this suspended stillness, intimacy becomes architecture—private grief held upright by the simplest of gestures.







