

This paired abstraction reads like two weathered frescoes pulled from memory—one cooled into slate and ash, the other warmed into bruised rose and olive—each surface veiled by stains, drips, and ghosted contours that suggest figures without ever granting them full arrival. The composition oscillates between compression and release: looping lines and pooled pigments create eddies of tension, while pale washes open brief clearings, as if light is trying to rehabilitate what time has eroded. Seen together, the works become a dialogue about duality—night and day, restraint and surrender—where the most poignant subject is not what is depicted, but what remains after repeated acts of looking, forgetting, and returning.







