



In this nocturnal tableau, a tawny, many-legged beast drifts across a bruised, textured ground like a procession of instincts given corporeal weight, its masklike face turning toward us with a quiet, unsettled recognition. Around it, totemic figures—part insect, part deity—hover in a dim cosmology where a small sun and crescent moon act less as illumination than as witness, pinning the scene to a threshold between dream and ritual. The composition’s deliberate flatness and earthen palette compress depth into symbol, so that every creature reads as an emblem—of guardianship, fear, metamorphosis—rather than an occupant of literal space. What emerges is a myth of passage: a fragile order of signs attempting to domesticate the dark, while the central animal carries the night forward, step after multiplied step.







