

A quiet, enigmatic figure—rendered in dense, crosshatched graphite—leans forward as if emerging from shadow, its single, watchful eye anchoring the composition with a sense of guarded interiority. Against the field of ochre, the white flower becomes a fragile counterweight to the heavy body mass, held between two hands that read simultaneously as offering and restraint. The stark economy of color and the grainy, weathered surface suggest memory as a stained wall: tenderness persists, but only through abrasion and endurance. In this suspended moment, innocence is not naïve; it is chosen, protected, and perhaps mourned.







