

A quiet assembly of dark, seed-like forms gathers before a torn, cratered field, as if a community has paused at the edge of an eroded terrain to contemplate passage. The raking light turns the cardboard surface into a fragile topography—its repeated peaks and sudden fissures echoing systems that promise order yet inevitably fracture—while the glossy bodies below cast long shadows that read like private histories. In the stark dialogue between manufactured grid and irregular “stones,” the work suggests resilience and migration: life insisting on presence, even when the ground itself feels provisional.
| Country Of Origin | life insisting on presence, even when the ground itself feels provisional. |







