


This work constructs an urban psyche out of fractured planes—blocks of steel-blue and ash-gray stacking like half-remembered facades, then dissolving into scraped veils and bruised transparencies. Light is not depicted but excavated: pale rectangles flare as windows of possibility, while the rough, abraded surfaces hold the residue of movement, erasure, and time. The thin diagonal lines read like surveying marks or fault-lines, quietly insisting on order even as the composition drifts toward disintegration. In this tension between architecture and atmosphere, the painting becomes a meditation on modern living—structured, restless, and perpetually under revision.







