



Rendered in spare black lines against a cool, muted ground, the diptych stages intimacy as a fractured memoryβtwo adjoining rooms, two partial bodies, and the quiet architecture of absence. The bedframes, window, and drawer unit read like domestic anchors, yet their schematic precision only amplifies the vulnerability of the reclining forms, whose contours drift between tenderness and erasure. The stark negative space becomes the true protagonist, pressing in like silence and turning the home into a psychological interior where closeness is felt as distance. In this pared-back vocabulary, the work suggests how private spaces hold echoes of touch, but also how they compartmentalize longing into separate panels of recall.







