
Colorful Chaos
The work explores childhood experience as a state of spontaneity, where order and disorder coexist without hierarchy. The act of scattering objects does not function as disruption, but as a natural expression of presence within space.
The adult point of view introduces a distance through which childhood energy acquires a dual reading: as play and simultaneously as “chaos.” This shift highlights how perception of environment changes depending on the gaze that observes it.
The work situates childhood creativity within a field of freedom, where mess is not a failure of order, but an active way of inhabiting the world.
If this work resonates with you, feel free to drop me an email.

On the Work
This detail focuses on the scattered garments, rendered as large chromatic forms without descriptive specificity, moving away from representational depiction. Their shape does not emerge through the recognition of objects, but through the intensity of the painterly gesture.
The surface is constructed through a combination of oil and charcoal, where charcoal is applied with strong, almost inscriptive pressure, functioning like a form of writing across the pictorial field. Through this process, drawing and color coexist as traces of energy rather than descriptive elements.



