

In this crowded, dreamlike tableau, figures slip between tenderness and control—hands extend like conductors or puppeteers, threading thin red lines through bodies that seem half-awake, half-remembered. A muted wash of grays and sepias is punctured by small urgencies of orange and patterned cloth, as if fragments of lived domesticity insist on surviving within a fog of collective anxiety. The composition stacks scenes like unstable strata, collapsing private interiors into a single psychic architecture where care, consumption, and collapse coexist. What emerges is a quiet allegory of modern life’s choreography: intimacy performed under invisible constraints, and identity dispersed into overlapping roles that never fully resolve.