



Set against an expanse of white that reads like silence, the solitary cow becomes a devotional icon—its body wrapped not in hide alone but in the printed skin of currency, where value is both sanctified and absurdly transactional. The meticulous, almost clinical realism of its form is interrupted by the ceremonial drape of saffron and patterned textiles, turning the animal into a moving altar and exposing how reverence can be adorned, commodified, and staged. A narrow band of red at the base anchors the figure like a threshold—part carpet, part warning line—so the work hovers between veneration and indictment, asking what we truly worship when faith and economy share the same garment.







