

Set against a velvety, enclosing darkness, the still life stages a quiet confrontation between appetite and unease: ribs and scattered cuts of meat lie like relics, their lacquered reds catching a dim, remorseful light. The small figurine with a cool blue vessel introduces a dissonant note of innocence—almost a votive presence—turning the scene from mere depiction into a meditation on consumption as ritual and loss. Thick, tactile brushwork makes the flesh feel both sumptuous and vulnerable, while the open negative space amplifies a hush of aftertaste, as if the feast has already passed and only its moral residue remains.







