



Against a veiled field of green, the vessel-forms hover like remembered archetypes—half still life, half diagram—where each hollowed oval reads as an eye, a seed, or a wound. The long, canoe-like cradle above and the grounded row below establish a quiet polarity between shelter and exposure, as if the work were weighing what we store versus what we reveal. Muted light and bruised, charcoal-brown surfaces give the objects a timeworn gravity, turning repetition into ritual and suggesting that containment is never neutral but always charged with desire, loss, and latent life.







