



A veil of molten ochre floods the surface, turning the canvas into a suspended atmosphere where form is not declared but remembered. Beneath this radiant wash, fractured geometries and faint vertical alignments surface like buried architecture, suggesting a figure or totemic presence that flickers between revelation and erasure. The light feels internal rather than cast, as if the painting is lit by its own slow-burning heat, inviting contemplation of how perception assembles meaning from partial traces. What emerges is a meditation on concealment—memory’s soft edits—where warmth becomes both shelter and haze.







