Interior of the Mind
What remains when memory fades?
This series explores the fragile space between architecture and emotion, structure and disintegration, reality and recollection.
Each painting begins as a figurative depiction — an interior, an exterior, a remembered space. But like memory itself, the details begin to dissolve. Perspective bends. Lines fracture. The familiar collapses into abstraction.
Layer by layer, time chips away at what once felt solid.
The still life is broken apart and reassembled into something softer — foggier — more imagined than observed.
The result is a kind of emotional architecture:
Right angles interrupted by gestural marks.
Geometry tangled in subconscious lines.
A balance between what we knew and what we’ve already started to forget.
These works invite you to join the dots, to speculate, to feel.
They are not illustrations of places — they are impressions of what those places meant. An emotional blueprints for what memory leaves behind.
For those drawn to stillness, spaciousness, and the quiet ache of forgetting, this series offers a visual meditation on memory’s slow fade.