

Suspended before a blood-warm halo of red, the figure reads like a saint of interiority—head bowed, gaze turned inward, as if listening for a language buried beneath the skin. The translucent veils and powdered whites soften the body into something almost evaporating, while the weight of ornament and the carved density of the torso anchor her to history, ritual, and inherited script. Cradling a mask-like face, she stages a quiet reckoning between performed identity and private grief, the surrounding leaves and slender rod suggesting time’s brittle drift and a measured, ceremonial stillness. In this hush, light becomes confession: a tender illumination that both reveals and erases, insisting that vulnerability is its own form of power.