



In this nocturnal tableau, a blue, hare-like creature curls within a pale orb as if the world itself were a fragile lens—containment becoming both refuge and exhibition. Around it, a ring of hybrid witnesses (monkeys, birds, and pale, human-animal forms) perch in trees and shadows, their gestures suggesting ritual observation rather than simple narrative, as though myth is being convened in silence. The dense, crosshatched darkness acts like a psychic atmosphere, punctuated by floating specks of color and the recurring halo motif, where light reads less as illumination than as a charged idea—knowledge, temptation, or consecration. The composition’s circular sanctuary at the center sets up a tension between innocence and scrutiny, proposing a fable about vulnerability: the self enclosed, the forest’s chorus deciding what it means.







