

Against a field of heated crimson, two women are rendered in softened, angular profiles—one seated and wrapped in a pale, map-like drapery, the other upright with a staff held as both support and boundary—forming a quiet duet of endurance and care. The restrained palette of ochres, browns, and muted pinks anchors the figures while the textured, shadowy mass behind them reads like a fractured shelter or burden, pressing in yet never fully consuming their calm. Negative space becomes psychological space here: the red ground amplifies vulnerability, but the women’s interlocked proximity turns that exposure into solidarity, suggesting resilience practiced in the everyday rather than proclaimed.







