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In this series, she portrays individuals within their personal yet public landscapes,expressing complex emotional states. Avoiding familiar forms and logical colors. Ghezel dissolves the boundaries between human and nature to the point of indistinction-transforming her subjects to unrecognizable beings adrift in a psychological terrain.
Marking a shift from her earlier works, the works on display embrace surreal textures and unrealistic colors, emerging from Ghezel's subjective world. where form and concept blur.
Rooted in a psychological disorientation, these works explore the uncertainty of safety and the presence of absolute insecurity-often within a single fleeting moment. Fear and fearlessness, anxiety and courage meet in helpless encounters filled with contrasted colors, exaggerations and uninvited emotions.
"Sacred Landscape offersacollective experienceof lonelinessanduncertainty, leaving us in a constant doubt as Ghezel herself states: "Are we witnessing the hallucination of a nightmare, or the enchantment of real life?"