



In a nocturnal thicket of saturated violets and deep greens, a woman moves with bowed head and measured resolve, her red skirt flaring like a living ember against the cool, dense foliage. The child perched on her hip meets the viewer’s gaze, a quiet counterpoint of openness to the mother’s inward gravity, turning the scene into a meditation on protection and inherited vigilance. Moonlight and shadow thread through broad leaves and sharp stems, compressing space so that the figures feel both cradled and hemmed in—suggesting a world where tenderness persists inside pressure, and the forest becomes a symbolic architecture of survival.







