

A young deer floats in a poised, mid-leap suspension, its delicate body modeled with tender realism against a luminous field of warm saffrons and rose—an atmosphere that feels less like landscape than remembered sensation. Behind it, the repeating geometric lattice acts as a quiet cosmology, turning the animal’s instinctive motion into a meditation on order and belonging, as if nature were briefly aligned with an unseen pattern. The watercolor-like bleed and scattered pigment blooms soften the grid’s certainty, suggesting the way innocence and freedom slip through structure while still being held by it. In this gentle tension between organic grace and sacred geometry, the work becomes an elegy for vulnerability that nonetheless insists on light.







