

In a luminous field of greens and saffrons, the artist stages a domestic circle where oversized, searching eyes turn ordinary craft into a kind of communal ritual. The central textile—dense with fish-like emblems and rhythmic ornament—anchors the composition like a mandala of labor, while the surrounding figures lean in and out of it, their curved postures and repeating bangles creating a gentle pulse of shared attention. Bright, saturated color and folk stylization soften the scene into memory, suggesting that tradition is not merely inherited but continuously remade through touch, conversation, and patient repetition. Beneath the playfulness lies a quiet assertion of care: creativity as intimacy, and home as the first gallery where culture learns to breathe.
| Net Quantity | creativity as intimacy, and home as the first gallery where culture learns to breathe. |