



This work reads like a weathered palimpsest of landscape and memory, where bands of ash-grey and slate drift horizontally as if sedimented by time rather than painted in a single moment. The softened atmosphere is repeatedly interrupted by granular accretions and faint, ember-like flecks near the lower register, suggesting life persisting beneath a veil of mist and erosion. Space is treated less as depth than as breath—compressed, released, and compressed again—so the eye moves through the surface as through fog, searching for a horizon that keeps dissolving. In this quiet instability, the painting becomes a meditation on endurance: a terrain both external and psychological, holding traces of what has been submerged yet not erased.







