

Rendered in a restrained graphite silence, this shelf of books becomes less a still life than a portrait of accumulated time—each frayed spine and softened corner holding the fatigue and tenderness of repeated return. The composition pivots between order and collapse: upright volumes stand like witnesses while the horizontal stacks sag into a quiet landslide, their layered edges catching light as if memory itself had a grain. Deep shadows pool between covers, turning negative space into a kind of interior architecture where what is unread, forgotten, or withheld feels as present as what is known. In its monochrome discipline, the work suggests knowledge not as certainty, but as weight—beautiful, imperfect, and intimately human.







