



This painting stages a fractured skyline that hovers between city and cliff—angular silhouettes scraped into being, then half-erased, as if memory and architecture were competing for the same ground. A cool, open turquoise field above acts like withheld breath, while dense blacks and greens below swallow the lower register, letting sudden reds flare up like warning signals or buried heat. The interplay of scumbled textures and sharp verticals turns the scene into a psychological topography: a place under construction, under pressure, and yet insistently alive. In its restless layering, the work suggests that the modern landscape is less a stable view than an accumulation of impacts—traces of movement, loss, and renewal held in uneasy balance.







