



A solitary leopard presides over a grand staircase as if appointed guardian of a forgotten threshold, its luminous coat cutting through a fevered red atmosphere that feels part velvet curtain, part warning flare. The architecture recedes in disciplined perspective—arches, columns, and banisters forming a ceremonial corridor—yet the circular vignette compresses the space into a dreamlike chamber where past and instinct converge. Warm, saturated light turns the interior into an altar of desire and danger, suggesting the uneasy domestication of the wild within cultured rooms. In the animal’s steady, frontal gaze, the work stages a confrontation between elegance and predation, inviting the viewer to question who truly owns this house: the builder, or the instincts that still roam its halls.







