



A solitary elephant form rises like a carved glyph against a burning aureole, its body rendered in thick, earthen reds that feel both ancient and freshly bruised by light. The composition compresses space into a devotional panel—vertical, iconic, and inward—where the halo’s gold pushes the figure forward while the surrounding umber absorbs it back into silence. Below, an upraised hand holds a small, concentrated flare, suggesting blessing and warning at once: a fragile human radiance confronting the weight of memory, power, and myth. The rough, granular surface reads as time itself—pigment behaving like sediment—so the animal becomes less subject than symbol, a guardian suspended between tenderness and monumentality.







