



This monochrome composition unfurls like a sudden apparition—an animal-bodied form and a human-like profile dissolving into one another through ink blooms, stippled textures, and eruptive sprays of mark-making. The force of the image lies in its tension between control and surrender: crisp silhouettes and patterned passages try to hold shape while the medium visibly bleeds, fractures, and evaporates at the edges. Negative space becomes a moral and emotional field, amplifying the sense of metamorphosis—identity not as a fixed portrait, but as something continually negotiated between instinct, memory, and erasure. The work reads as a quiet myth of becoming, where the body is less a boundary than a threshold.







