



In this spare watercolor, a small bird clings to a single upright stem as though to the last vertical certainty in an otherwise unspoken world, its body rendered in quick, economical washes that keep the image on the edge of disappearance. The blunt reds—flower, beak, cheek—puncture the quiet field of white like pulses of appetite and vulnerability, turning a simple act of feeding into a tender negotiation between need and grace. Compositionally, the stem functions as both axis and boundary, holding the bird in a poised diagonal that suggests effort without drama, and inviting the viewer to contemplate how delicacy can be an expression of endurance.







