

A sleeping pig, rendered in velvety charcoal tones, anchors the composition with a weight that feels both tender and monumental—an emblem of vulnerability disguised as mass. Around it, the pale atmosphere blushes from cool gray into faint rose, as if dawn were diluting the edges of the animal’s presence and turning the scene into a quiet reverie. The scattered golden birds (or fluttering forms) skim the foreground like fleeting thoughts, their lightness counterpointing the pig’s dense stillness and suggesting a gentle tension between instinctual rest and the world’s persistent motion. In this softened, nearly hushed space, the work reads as a meditation on innocence, consumption, and peace—where even the humblest body becomes a site of grace.







