"The Anatomy of Suffering"
Yekta’s work exposes the architecture of mental anguish with unsettling precision. His art does not offer redemption or relief. It lingers in the restless space between thought and obsession, where pain becomes the only language left to speak.
Each piece feels like an autopsy of the mind, clinical in its clarity yet deeply human in its awareness of suffering. He captures what it means to be consumed by one’s own patterns, to confront a mind that never lets you rest.
There is no attempt to beautify despair. Instead Yekta lets it stand in its raw, deliberate form. His compositions demand confrontation, not sympathy.
Few artists today explore the interior chaos of consciousness with this level of honesty and control. His work is not about survival. It is about recognition, the brutal recognition of what it means to think too much, to feel too deeply, and to exist without escape.