



Suspended in a field of saturated red, the crawling child becomes a tender point of gravity—an emblem of beginnings—set against a backdrop that reads like a vast circuit diagram, where intimacy is quietly rewired by systems. The oval void functions as both halo and containment, isolating the figure in a manufactured atmosphere while the floating, organ-like apparatus hints at nurture turned mechanical, breath and care mediated through design. Light falls with a staged clarity, sharpening the child’s alert gaze and open mouth into a question: what does innocence become when it is born inside infrastructure rather than landscape? The work’s emotional charge resides in this friction between warmth and sterilization, proposing a future where vulnerability is not erased, only engineered.
| Country Of Origin | what does innocence become when it is born inside infrastructure rather than landscape? The work’s emotional charge resides in this friction between warmth and sterilization, proposing a future where vulnerability is not erased, only engineered. |







