

A nocturnal field of fractured blues and soot-black planes holds its imagery just at the edge of recognition, where silhouettes of winged, animal-like forms drift through a weathered atmosphere like memories resurfacing from deep water. The surface is deliberately distressed—scraped, mottled, and layered—so that light appears not as illumination but as abrasion, a quiet insistence breaking through the gloom. Composed as a dense, interlocking choreography of shapes, the work evokes a submerged ecology of instincts: migration, pursuit, and survival rendered as shadow-play rather than spectacle. In its restrained palette and tactile erosion, the piece becomes a meditation on concealment—how presence can be felt most intensely when it refuses to fully declare itself.