



A monumental green massif rises like a living reliquary, its ridges carved into terraced sanctuaries and pale, clustered dwellings—an entire civilization condensed into a single, floating geology. Against a cool, vaporous blue that dissolves the horizon, the mountain’s luminous greens read as both abundance and burden, a paradise made weighty by possession and upkeep. Below, the procession of animals and the straining figure suggest a quiet moral fable: nature is not merely scenery but the load we inherit, carry, and negotiate, even as it shelters our most intimate architectures. The composition’s stark vertical hierarchy—heavenly island above, vulnerable bodies below—turns landscape into conscience, asking what it costs to hold “home” aloft.







