

This work unfolds like a half-remembered shoreline or industrial silhouette emerging from mist, where fractured whites and electric blues flare against a brooding field of slate and violet. The composition leans into abrasion and erasure—scraped textures, drips, and slashed diagonals—so the “structure” feels both built and dissolving, suspended between apparition and ruin. Light becomes a conceptual force rather than a source: it ruptures the darkness in cold, metallic flashes, suggesting resilience under pressure and the uneasy permanence of human marks within a vast, weathered atmosphere. What remains is a lyrical tension between density and void, as if the painting is listening for a horizon that keeps receding.







