

Suspended in a field of white, the composition stages a quiet ritual of containment: a weathered, bluish block—scarred with scratches and faint geometric remnants—feels like an urban palimpsest held in place by looping, serpentine arcs. The crescent form above, with its single, eye-like nucleus, presides as a watchful moon, casting an inward pressure that turns the central “wall” into a psychological threshold rather than a simple surface. Against the emphatic red cradle below, sprigs of yellow leafage break through the monochrome coils like small assertions of life, suggesting renewal not as escape from damage but as something that threads itself through it. The work’s tension—between hard architecture and organic persistence, between surveillance and shelter—invites a reading of resilience as a negotiated, ongoing balance.







