"Entangled Forms" is a series of paintings that explores the fusion of bodies—the moment when two entities meet and begin to transform each other. They are not just bodies, but things in process, mutants that, upon contact, distort, absorb, and merge. There are no clear boundaries: individuality dissolves in the union, and the final form remains uncertain.
These entangled figures evoke the idea of identity as something unstable, constantly shifting. As Gilles Deleuze suggests in A Thousand Plateaus, identity is not fixed but a flow of becomings, a space of transformation where the self is no longer a closed unit but an opening to new possibilities.
Here, the body is not just flesh but a shifting territory. In the moment two bodies meet, something new emerges, but before the final fusion, there is an in-between state—uncertain, in flux, mutating. That is the image these paintings seek to capture: the moment where nothing is defined, where boundaries blur, and the body has yet to decide what it will become.