



Suspended in wide fields of white, these biomorphic fragments read like specimens of an inner botanyβpetal, membrane, and pollen rendered with filigreed line and porous texture, hovering between tenderness and rupture. Veils of violet and amber drift across denser, earth-toned cores, where perforations and stippled shadows suggest erosion, incubation, and the slow labor of transformation. The compositions breathe through asymmetry and generous negative space, allowing each form to feel both isolated and in quiet correspondence, as if part of a dispersed ecosystem. What emerges is a meditation on fragility: growth that is never purely decorative, but marked by time, seepage, and the resilience of delicate structures.







