



In a hush of blue-green twilight, a sleeping figure drapes herself over a pale horse as if surrendering her weight to a gentler world, the two bodies merging into a single sanctuary of breath and silence. The vine-like mane, threaded with tender leaves, turns the animal into a living arboreal spirit—half guardian, half dream—while the crescent moon punctuates the space like a quiet vow of nocturnal protection. Soft gradients and rounded forms dissolve edges, suggesting that in this realm boundaries between human, nature, and myth are porous, held together by trust rather than force. The composition’s downward lull and closed eyes invite a reading of innocence reclaimed: rest as a radical return to belonging.







