



A densely woven carpet of ochres and burnished reds presses to the picture plane, turning fallen leaves into a near-abstract field where repetition becomes rhythm and time feels suspended. Subtle shifts of contour and shading keep the surface breathing, while the composition’s lack of horizon denies easy orientation—inviting a meditative, immersive gaze rather than a narrative path. Against this autumnal saturation, the sudden sparks of tender green read like quiet insistences of renewal, small pulses of life asserting themselves within the beauty of decay. The work ultimately becomes a contemplation of cycles—how abundance, loss, and return coexist in the same breath of nature.







