

Set against a vast, bleached sky, the elephants advance like living monuments, their weight rendered in velvety blacks while the crimson drapery cuts through the silence as a pulse of ceremony and power. The composition’s low horizon and receding second figure create a procession that feels both timeless and solitary, emphasizing distance not only in space but in human experience. By stripping the world to near-monochrome and reserving color for ritual cloth and trim, the work suggests how tradition can dignify—yet also burden—bodies made to carry history, spectacle, and labor.







