A mysterious and surreal work by an artist whose visual language feels both familiar and unsettling. Hanging House resists immediate explanation, opening a wide space for imagination and personal interpretation.
At first glance, the scene is quietly disturbing: a half-ruined house hovers above the sea, supported by tentacle-like, octopus legs, while gulls circle restlessly in the air. Set slightly apart from the central composition, the house appears indifferent, almost detached - less an object than an intrusion. Its placement and fragile state heighten a sense of unreality, prompting the viewer to question what is seen: is this structure part of the world it occupies, or a projection of something imagined?
The dynamic tension of the image draws the eye beyond the edges of the painting, suggesting an unseen continuation - where has this house come from, and what lies outside the frame? The work balances opposing emotions: beauty and unease, fantasy and tragedy, curiosity and quiet dread.
Hanging House is both haunting and compelling, inviting the viewer to invent their own narrative - and to decide what this suspended place means to them.