
Maureen Golgata's "NOCTURNAL CROSSING N°1" is an acrylic and charcoal work on paper that trades the retained saturation of her FRAGMENT OF LIFE pieces for a darker, more contrasted register. The 30 × 23 cm ground sits closer to black than to color, and the incisions cut sharper against it, scored lines catching what light the surface allows. Charcoal deepens the shadow rather than softening it, settling into the grooves left by each incision.
The title places the work at a threshold — a crossing made at night, between waking and sleep, between one state of awareness and another. Golgata's scarified surface becomes, here, a kind of terrain: something to be passed through rather than simply looked at, its marks reading as steps rather than static gestures, each one carrying the eye a little further into the dark.
For collectors drawn to Golgata's darker palette, "NOCTURNAL CROSSING N°1" offers a more somber counterpoint within her small-format body of work, still rooted in memory but pitched toward its uncertain, nocturnal edges — a quieter, more interior register within her practice.