Modern life sells the idea that more is better, faster is smarter, and comfort equals success. This body of work quietly disagrees. It looks at how technology and possessions tug at us from every direction, offering ease while thinning out whatever sits underneath. The images feel dense without shouting, asking viewers to slow down and sit with the tension between progress and being human. Loose, almost sketched figures drift between people, animals and objects, their outlines slipping as desire takes over. Lust, anger and delusion blur identities until nothing feels solid for long. Moments of stillness appear through circular forms and lotus motifs, small visual pauses that suggest another way of measuring value. Rather than offering answers, the exhibition leaves a question hanging. Is fulfilment really about gathering more, or does it begin when we learn to release?
February 14-March 8. Free. Number1Gallery, 10am-7pm

