



In a theater of saturated reds and electric blues, the figures collide in a flattened, mask-like choreography where individuality gives way to archetype and force. The sweeping sickle and raised axe become emblems of labor turned volatile, their curved and angular silhouettes cutting the space like ideological punctuation while the tiger’s bared mouth amplifies the scene’s raw instinct. Hard contour lines and unmodeled color fields deny depth, pressing the struggle to the surface as a public, unavoidable spectacle—part ritual, part uprising, part warning about the thin membrane between survival and violence.







