

Rendered in stark black and white, the figure becomes a living trunk—arms raised, body rooted—holding aloft a canopy so dense it reads like both sanctuary and burden. Among the leaves, the intrusion of cameras, screens, and devices turns the “tree of life” into an archive of surveillance and consumption, suggesting a modern ecology where attention is harvested as readily as fruit. The compressed space and relentless patterning create a claustrophobic vitality, while the lone stance on a dark mound hints at resilience: a human will insisting on balance amid a world that grafts technology onto nature’s oldest forms.







