



A white horse surges across a burnt-ochre field, its body fractured into angular planes as if memory and motion are being sketched at once, then repainted in urgency. The high-contrast interplay of chalky whites and charcoal cuts turns the animal into a beacon—purity tested against a heated, almost earthen atmosphere—while the sweeping mane and tense foreleg compress the moment just before escape. Scratches, drips, and gestural marks read like reins of invisible forces, suggesting both confinement and resilience, as though freedom is not a place but an insistence. In this restless balance between structure and spontaneity, the horse becomes a symbol of spirit pushing through the architecture of constraint.







