



A face materializes from a lattice of fractured silhouettes, as if identity were being assembled from the noise of a crowd and the debris of memory. The composition locks the portrait inside a dark, rectangular field while pale, repeated forms press in from the margins, turning negative space into a kind of public scrutiny that both reveals and erases. Cool greys and muted blue-greens temper the drama, suggesting emotional distance—an intimacy held at arm’s length—while the stencil-like interruptions read as censorship, camouflage, and the persistence of the self despite distortion. The work becomes a meditation on visibility: how a person is seen, misread, and reconstructed through patterns that society insists on overlaying.







