



In Portraits of Erosion, the human face becomes a fragile architecture of memory, time, and transformation. Each portrait is layered with cracks, textures, and fragments—suggesting not destruction, but survival. These are not images of brokenness, but of persistence through slow decay. The works explore identity as something both hidden and revealed by erosion—where the peeling of surfaces uncovers deeper emotional truths. Paint, rust, paper, and stone merge with skin to create figures caught between presence and disappearance, beauty and ruin. This collection speaks to the quiet resilience that lives beneath damage, to the stories etched in what remains, and to the haunting grace of what fades.