

Against an expanse of earthen brown, a constellation of pale sheep gathers like drifting thoughts, their repeated silhouettes forming a soft, pulsing geometry of routine and dependence. The lone herder, rendered with quiet solidity, stands as both guardian and outsider—his stillness counterpointing the flock’s lowered heads and gentle, anonymous movement. Light is withheld rather than dramatized, so the scene reads as memory or parable: a meditation on stewardship, solitude, and the fragile order humans impose upon nature’s indifferent ground.







