



Centered like a vulnerable organ on display, the brain is rendered in warm, bruised reds that feel both vital and inflamed, while a ring of syringes hovers above it with clinical detachment—an unsettling crown that implies intervention as control. The limited injections of color (green, orange, blue) puncture the otherwise monochrome field, suggesting standardized “solutions” imposed on an unruly interior life, each tint a different promise of relief or compliance. Around this fragile anatomy, the watery red wash blooms like a fevered aura, turning the surrounding space into an emotional climate—an atmosphere where treatment, dependence, and the politics of care quietly collide.







