Daydreaming with Clouds.

A more personal body of work where clouds become the primary language of my interiority. They act as soft, fleeting vessels for my observations on freedom, love, pain, and the weird mechanics of my own mind. This series is a deliberate embrace of fragility, using these ethereal forms to give shape to my most vulnerable self.

The Let-in Clouds (2025).

oil on canvas.

50 x 40cm.

“The Let-In Cloud” constructs a portal for daydreaming within the confines of everyday life. Formally inspired by the structured interiors of David Hockney, the painting depicts a room that willingly breaches its own boundaries. A door, a classic symbol of division, is instead transformed into a threshold of possibility, actively ushering in a vast, serene cloud.

This act of welcome is charged by a signature palette of luminous azure and pulsating neon pink. These are not descriptive colours but psychological ones: the neon pink—a hue of the artificial and the urban—harmonizes with the blue of an idealized sky, creating a resonant energy that symbolizes a hopeful, healing dialogue between our interior selves and the exterior world.

As the first in a series, this cloud is more than weather; it is a soft, transient guest in the hard architecture of modern existence. It represents a moment of conscious, fragile connection—a choice to let the outside in, to allow fantasy to permeate reality. This work is a quiet manifesto for finding resilience not by escaping the room, but by changing its very atmosphere.

Previous
Previous

Eclipse of the Self.

Next
Next

Two Moons in Darkness