

Three stylized avian figures stand in quiet communion, their rounded beaks and simplified anatomy lending them the dignity of totems rather than mere animals. The warm, terracotta-like surface is interrupted by pale, star-shaped voids in the torso—an incision of light and texture that suggests an inner compass, a shared heartbeat, or the invisible geometry that binds a family unit. Their differing scales choreograph a gentle hierarchy—guardian, companion, offspring—while the austere architectural backdrop and creeping vines set nature’s tenderness against the city’s hard planes. In this poised stillness, the work becomes a meditation on shelter and continuity: bodies as monuments, and affection as an abstract structure held at the center.







