

This panorama reads like a lived ecology—earth rendered in ochres and bruised browns, scored with paths that carry a white procession of cattle as if memory itself were migrating across the land. Ponds and riverbeds of muted blue act as rare apertures of respite, while scattered green shrubs and sudden red blooms punctuate the terrain like stubborn acts of renewal amid exhaustion. The composition compresses vastness and intimacy at once: tiny clustered figures along the water’s edge mirror the herd’s curve, suggesting a shared dependence on scarce sustenance and a quiet choreography between human labor and animal passage. Beneath its narrative surface, the work becomes a meditation on survival—how communities map their hopes onto fragile reservoirs, and how the land, worn and luminous, holds both scarcity and continuity in the same breath.







