

Three elongated, deer-like forms rise in a quiet triangulation, their upturned snouts nearly touching as if exchanging breath, prayer, or a shared secret. Against a field of saturated green, the pale, intricately veined trees and drifting leaves—blue and amber like alternating seasons—create a rhythmic canopy that both shelters and animates the scene. The delicate stippling of the bodies lends them a sculptural stillness, while the patterned magentas and ochres at ear and flank read as inner song made visible, suggesting kinship not only among the animals but between creature and forest. What emerges is a tender allegory of belonging: a moment where nature’s abundance becomes a language, and attention itself feels like devotion.







