



This work reads like a weathered palimpsest—layers of soot-dark strata, bruised blues, and ember-like oranges suspended beneath a hushed, misted sky. The composition moves horizontally like sedimentary time, where veiled marks and scraped textures suggest a city or shoreline dissolving into memory rather than presenting itself as a fixed place. Light is not depicted so much as excavated, flickering through abrasions and translucencies to imply resilience amid erosion. In its quiet turbulence, the painting becomes a meditation on accumulation—of histories, of atmospheres, of emotions—held in fragile balance before they finally fade.







