



This monochrome drawing unfolds like a palimpsest of memory, where a reclining figure and a crouched, introspective presence anchor a field of drifting symbols—faces, instruments, and architectural traces—half-emerging from the paper’s mist. Charcoal gradations behave as both atmosphere and erasure, letting light pool on limbs and objects while the surrounding vignettes dissolve into a dream-logic of association. The composition’s diagonal pull and looping curves suggest a cyclical passage between intimacy and distance, as if the work is mapping how personal desire, cultural ritual, and daily noise braid into a single interior landscape. In its softened edges and layered imagery, the piece reads as a quiet meditation on the way identity is assembled from fragments—seen, heard, and remembered.







