



A dense field of incandescent reds is laid down in measured bands, as if the painting is breathing in slow, heated intervals—each striation holding a faint memory of text, architecture, or crowd, then letting it dissolve back into pigment. The surface oscillates between opacity and revelation: gold-black flecks at the margins act like torn thresholds, suggesting a narrative trapped behind layers of insistence and erasure. What emerges is not a scene but a state of being—urgency, resilience, and the quiet violence of repetition—where light is not cast upon the world so much as generated from within the painted skin itself.







