Fields of Reflection

Fields Of Reflection is a series of paintings that explores landscape as a space of memory, perception, and emotional resonance rather than a fixed or identifiable place. The works move between abstraction and recognition, where images form only to dissolve again into shifting atmospheric fields.

Built through layered surfaces of green, translucent passages of light, and subtle tonal transitions, the paintings suggest environments that are constantly in flux. Deep mineral greens, luminous yellow-greens, and muted reflective tones create spaces that feel both organic and unstable—like landscapes seen through recollection rather than direct observation.

Within these fields, traces of structure appear and fade: vertical marks hint at rainfall, erosion, vegetation, or architectural remnants gradually absorbed by time. Human presence is reduced to fragile gestures, often nearly indistinguishable from the surrounding environment, functioning as quiet indicators of scale and memory rather than narrative subjects.

Rather than depicting specific locations, the series constructs psychological environments shaped by remembering and forgetting. Water, light, and vegetation emerge as recurring impressions, continually dissolving back into layered surfaces.

The green palette is not symbolic in a fixed way, but experiential. It holds multiple states at once—growth and decay, clarity and obscurity, presence and disappearance. Through this ambiguity, the paintings resist resolution and remain open, unstable fields of perception.

Fields of Reflection ultimately considers how memory behaves like a surface: layered, shifting, and continuously rewritten beneath what is visible.