

In a room steeped in bruised greys and ashen browns, the act of eating becomes a kind of mute struggle—hands lifted to the mouth as if to silence speech, to swallow more than food. The composition tightens around the table’s cluttered still-life—bottles, plates, and dulled fruit—while the vacant red chair flares like an accusation, a theatrical absence at the heart of shared ritual. This single saturated note of color punctures the scene’s heaviness, suggesting both appetite and violence, comfort and shame, as if domestic life is staged here as endurance rather than communion.







