



A bruised tapestry of crimson earth and newsprint becomes a theatre of public violence, where the body—rendered in ashen chiaroscuro—lies like an indictment rather than a victim. The assailant’s facelessness, topped by a stark cross-like silhouette, turns individuality into ideology, suggesting that cruelty here is procedural, almost sanctified, while the scattered type bleeds into the ground as if language itself has been weaponized. Crow and totemic, pawn-like forms stand as witnesses or complicit markers, tightening the composition into a claustrophobic tribunal where truth is fragmented, circulated, and ultimately ignored. The work’s harsh palette and collage texture insist on the uneasy collision between reportage and flesh, asking how easily society reads atrocity as just another column of print.







