Resonance in Glass
This painting began with a simple arrangement of bottles and glasses—objects we often overlook, yet ones that quietly witness human presence. I was drawn not to their form alone, but to what they hold beyond visibility: the echoes of conversations, pauses, and unspoken moments.
The dark, muted background represents silence—the kind that settles after everything has been said. Against this stillness, subtle strokes of yellow emerge like gentle pulses of energy, suggesting that even in absence, something continues to resonate.
Glass, in this work, becomes a metaphor for memory—transparent yet reflective, fragile yet enduring. The overlapping shapes blur clarity, much like how memories shift and soften over time.
I intentionally kept the lines raw and slightly unfinished, allowing imperfection to speak. Because what lingers in life is rarely precise—it is felt, remembered, and reinterpreted.
“Resonance in Glass” is not about objects on a table; it is about the quiet energy they carry—the presence that remains, long after the moment has passed.