
A crowned, skeletal figure stands in defiant salute, framed by fractured slogans—“Freedom,” “New Power,” “Reclaim”—that feel both declarative and unstable. The map of Africa burns in saturated yellows and blacks, while monarchic symbols are crossed out and reworked, suggesting cycles of overthrow and rebranding. Rendered in raw, expressive strokes, the composition carries the urgency of protest art rather than celebration. Power here is exposed as theatrical—costumed, recycled, and forever shadowed by consequence.
crowned, skeletal figure stands in defiant salute, framed by fractured slogans—“Freedom,” “New Power,” “Reclaim”—that feel both declarative and unstable. The map of Africa burns in saturated yellows and blacks, while monarchic symbols are crossed out and reworked, suggesting cycles of overthrow and rebranding. Rendered in raw, expressive strokes, the composition carries the urgency of protest art rather than celebration. Power here is exposed as theatrical—costumed, recycled, and forever shadowed by consequence.