• Where Meaning and Memory Meet - A collection reflecting on remembrance, human suffering, inner freedom, and the search for meaning in the presence of sorrow. Through symbols of walls, doors, witnesses, and keys, these works honor the dignity of the human spirit and the light that refuses to be extinguished.
• This painting stands as a visual memorial — not only to the victims of Auschwitz, but to every life marked by cruelty, silence, and loss. The red field carries weight, memory, and the presence of those who can no longer speak for themselves. Within the layered forms, figures seem to rise and remain: quiet witnesses, fragile yet un erased.
• The words We Will Not Forget anchor the piece with both grief and responsibility. This is not only a painting about suffering; it is about remembrance, endurance, and the sacred duty to keep human dignity alive in the face of evil.
• A solemn, textured work created as an act of honor, witness, and remembrance.
• size 24”/18”
• framed
• Where Meaning and Memory Meet - A collection reflecting on remembrance, human suffering, inner freedom, and the search for meaning in the presence of sorrow. Through symbols of walls, doors, witnesses, and keys, these works honor the dignity of the human spirit and the light that refuses to be extinguished.
• This painting stands as a visual memorial — not only to the victims of Auschwitz, but to every life marked by cruelty, silence, and loss. The red field carries weight, memory, and the presence of those who can no longer speak for themselves. Within the layered forms, figures seem to rise and remain: quiet witnesses, fragile yet un erased.
• The words We Will Not Forget anchor the piece with both grief and responsibility. This is not only a painting about suffering; it is about remembrance, endurance, and the sacred duty to keep human dignity alive in the face of evil.
• A solemn, textured work created as an act of honor, witness, and remembrance.
• size 24”/18”
• framed