South Tower, 6:02 p.m., 9/11 is a 48 x 48 inch oil painting on paper mounted to canvas, presented as a diptych. Through stark geometric forms and heavy structural shapes, the work reflects on the skeletal remains of the South Tower after the devastation of September 11th, transforming twisted steel and fractured beams into an abstract meditation on loss, endurance, and memory. Deep blacks, muted grays, rust-reds, and fiery oranges evoke heat, ruin, and the lingering atmosphere of destruction, while the divided panels suggest both separation and collapse. Rather than depicting the tragedy literally, the painting approaches it through structure and emotion, standing as both an elegy and a quiet tribute to one of the defining moments of modern history.
South Tower, 6:02 p.m., 9/11 is a 48 x 48 inch oil painting on paper mounted to canvas, presented as a diptych. Through stark geometric forms and heavy structural shapes, the work reflects on the skeletal remains of the South Tower after the devastation of September 11th, transforming twisted steel and fractured beams into an abstract meditation on loss, endurance, and memory. Deep blacks, muted grays, rust-reds, and fiery oranges evoke heat, ruin, and the lingering atmosphere of destruction, while the divided panels suggest both separation and collapse. Rather than depicting the tragedy literally, the painting approaches it through structure and emotion, standing as both an elegy and a quiet tribute to one of the defining moments of modern history.