

A riot of chromatic geometry assembles into a fever-dream aviary, where bird heads drift like watchful spirits over a fragmented metropolis of screens, windows, and circuitry. The composition choreographs a constant oscillation between order and disruption—hard-edged blocks and pixel-like tesserae collide with soft, masklike profiles, turning the picture plane into a crowded crossroads of signals and instincts. Light is not modeled but broadcast: saturated blues, acidic greens, and incandescent pinks pulse as if the city itself were thinking, while the birds—half totem, half surveillance—suggest nature’s presence not as refuge, but as an uneasy witness to our engineered habitats.







