



A bruised geometry emerges from a field of sea-glass blue, where scraped textures and layered stains read like memory etched into plaster. The composition’s dark cruciform thrust anchors the eye, yet its frayed edges dissolve into misted passages, suggesting a self in flux—held together by pressure, erosion, and time. Rusty umbers seep through the center like a concealed ember, turning the cool atmosphere into a quiet psychological weather, at once protective and unsettled. In this tension between structure and decay, the painting proposes that stability is never pristine—only continually repaired.







