



Bathed in a tender rose haze, the scene stages a precarious ride between myth and the everyday: a horned, goddess-like figure becomes both mount and monument while the child clings to her braid as if grasping lineage itself. Opposite, a fetal body floats against a geometric field punctured by faucets—metallic stand-ins for nourishment, control, and the rationing of intimacy—turning the act of “drawing life” into an anxious negotiation. The composition pivots on this split, where soft watercolor diffusion masks the work’s sharper psychological edges, suggesting innocence moving through systems that measure and dispense belonging.







