

This work renders an interior as a quiet labyrinth, seen from a distanced, almost architectural gaze that turns everyday furniture into monuments of solitude. Muted greens and soot-dark shadows pool across tiled planes, while the skewed geometry and cropped walls compress the space into a staged enclosureβan environment that feels both domestic and institutional. Light arrives in hard, window-sliced wedges, not to warm the room but to measure it, suggesting surveillance, memory, and the uneasy order of routines. The single chair, stranded at the center, reads as a stand-in for the absent body: a small icon of waiting inside a carefully controlled silence.







