



A vertical chorus of tree trunks rises like weathered totems, their perforated surfaces becoming both architecture and memory, while a restless congregation of birds erupts around them in spiraling, centrifugal motion. Against the lucid turquoise sky, the warm ochres and russets of plumage read as embers—life flaring briefly, insistently—so that each wingbeat feels like a pulse between refuge and flight. The composition stages a tension between the steadfast, hollowed columns and the riot of movement, suggesting community built from absence: nests and cavities as tender wounds that nonetheless shelter. In this vivid ecology, the work becomes a meditation on belonging—how sanctuaries are carved over time, and how freedom always returns to orbit the places that hold it.







