



A trio of butterflies drifts across a field of tightly woven, concentric color bands, as if the air itself has been engineered into ripples that both cradle and resist their flight. The opalescent blues and violets, shot through with subtle magenta interference, create a moiré-like vibration that turns stillness into motion and makes the insects’ fragile bodies feel momentarily monumental. By placing these delicate figures against a patterned expanse that reads as landscape, textile, and optical phenomenon at once, the work meditates on how nature survives inside systems—beauty persisting, adapting, and quietly unsettling the geometry that tries to contain it.







