The Shape of Remembering`

“Memory is not a single thread, but a landscape formed through fragments.”

The Shape of Remembering explores memory as something fluid, layered, and continuously reconstructed. Across the series, fragments of architecture, plants, objects, and landscapes emerge and dissolve within shifting compositions shaped less by chronology than by association and emotional resonance.

The paintings do not attempt to depict specific moments or places. Instead, they trace the way recollection transforms over time—compressing experiences into symbolic forms, partial images, and recurring visual motifs. Familiar elements reappear throughout the works like lingering impressions: vessels, trees, windows, interiors, and distant structures suspended between recognition and abstraction.

Flattened spaces, unstable perspectives, and layered surfaces reflect the fragmentary nature of remembering itself. The works suggest that memory is not preserved intact, but continually reshaped through absence, emotion, and imagination.

Rather than presenting fixed narratives, the series invites viewers into spaces where recollection becomes atmospheric and open-ended—where meaning emerges gradually through accumulation, repetition, and trace.

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