



This work stages domestic life as a vertiginous maze of terraces and stairwells, where hard-edged geometry corrals the figures into separate compartments of solitude. Muted greys and bruised blues press in like concrete weather, yet shafts of pale light carve a fragile corridor through the architecture, suggesting hope that must be negotiated rather than received. The boy’s upraised red umbrella reads as a small, ceremonial defiance—an improvised shelter held aloft in a space that offers little protection—while the leaning woman and the disembodied legs at the edge imply unseen stories of fatigue, play, or collapse. Even the potted plant, perched on a ledge, becomes a quiet emblem of persistence: life maintained in tight margins, insisting on softness within the city’s angular restraint.







