

Suspended in a bruised, earthen darkness, two adult hands hover like a hesitant benediction while smaller, pallid hands reach upward in a silent plea, collapsing the distance between protection and surrender. The composition drives the eye downward into a stark, framed opening—part threshold, part wound—where a scrap of white cloth becomes the lone flare of light, suggesting both shroud and refuge. The granular, worn surface reads as time itself—abrasive, erasing—so that the scene feels less like a single moment than an allegory of inheritance: what is held, what is released, and what disappears beneath the floor of memory.







