



Two angular, monochrome figures hover in a charged red field, their suspended bodies and cropped planes suggesting a conversation caught between accusation and confession. The deep crimson ground reads like a psychological stage—at once intimate and volatile—while the stark, chalky modeling of the forms creates a sense of quiet vulnerability against the surrounding heat. Each figure is crowned by a white bird, a fragile emblem of thought, witness, or freedom, complicating the tense pointing gesture with the possibility of tenderness and release. The central vertical seam becomes a silent boundary—separating selves, yet insisting on symmetry—so the work feels less like a quarrel than a mirrored reckoning.







