

A stark monochrome city rises like a cutout horizon, its crisp silhouette pressing down on a triptych of human scenes where the body becomes both subject and battleground. In the left panel, the inverted figure reads as a precarious attempt at balance under public scrutiny, while the central skeletal dancer—caught mid-gesture—turns vitality into an anxious performance, all ribbed light and sharpened contour. The reclining nude on the right is rendered with a cool, sculptural weight, yet her averted gaze and the hard compartmentalization of space suggest intimacy staged for consumption, not comfort. Together, the panels weave a quiet indictment of urban life: how the metropolis partitions experience, choreographs desire, and leaves the self oscillating between exposure and erasure.







