

In a field of bruised blues and ash-grey textures, a skeletal serpent rises like an archeological memory, its hollowed anatomy rendered with a quiet, forensic reverence. Against this memento mori, a small bird—warmly lit at the crown and breast—becomes the painting’s tender contradiction, a living ember perched at the edge of extinction. The composition stages a suspended encounter between fragility and inevitability: life does not conquer death here, but insists on being seen, its presence sharpening the surrounding silence into meaning. Light moves like breath across the surface, turning bone, feather, and shadow into a single meditation on persistence within decay.







