CLEAVE explores the paradox at the heart of every boundary: the moment in which division and union become indistinguishable. Each work in the series is composed of two independent landscapes, cut apart and recombined to form new terrains. Across sixty-four permutations, the images reveal how separation is never absolute - every fracture carries the memory of what it once connected. The line that splits the compositions is not a wound but an axis of transformation. As the halves shift and realign, they generate unexpected harmonies and tensions, suggesting that identity is a mutable construct shaped by contrast, proximity, and collision. In CLEAVE, the landscape becomes a site of dual becoming. What was once whole is severed; what was severed becomes whole again. The collection invites viewers to inhabit this unstable space, where rupture turns into resonance and the act of dividing becomes a new form of creation.