I draw based on snapshot photographs taken by myself or others. Fragments from these images are quietly interspersed across the canvas. What may appear calm or balanced at first often carries a subtle instability—like a photo taken by an accidental press of the shutter, or a faint, unsettling memory lingering at the edge of one’s vision.
Rather than seeking resolution, my works present the dissonance and discomfort that arise from the relationships between things—how they shift, misalign, or resist cohesion. The depicted elements do not stand alone; their meanings emerge through proximity, contrast, and spatial tension. I depict “distance”—between objects, between moments—and record that uneven blur with brushes and pigment.
Like passing scenery glimpsed from a car window, fragments resurface unexpectedly in the periphery, leaving behind quiet traces of imbalance.