

A dense field of tessellated brushstrokes rises like a woven textile of color, each vertical dash acting as a pulse in a larger chromatic organism. The composition denies a single focal point, instead building a slow, hypnotic rhythm where blues and greens cool into intermittent flares of magenta, ochre, and vermilion, as if light is being filtered through memory rather than atmosphere. Its subtle undulations suggest topography—an aerial landscape that refuses to settle into certainty—inviting the viewer to read mood and movement in the seams between marks. What emerges is a meditation on multiplicity: countless small decisions accumulating into a unified, breathing surface that feels at once celebratory and quietly contemplative.