

This work stages a compressed theatre of figures where fractured contours and poster-like color fields—vermilion, saffron, cobalt, and ash—collide like competing memories on a single plane. The umbrella’s pale arc reads as a fragile canopy of respite, yet it shelters bodies that seem emotionally estranged, their faces rendered as masks suspended between intimacy and anonymity. By alternating dense black line-work with flat, declarative pigment, the artist turns everyday gestures into symbols of social choreography—rest, labor, and watchfulness—suggesting a community held together less by harmony than by the uneasy negotiations of shared space. The overall effect is celebratory and unsettled at once, as if modern life were a procession whose music is bright but whose pauses reveal quiet dislocation.







