



The composition stages a sly pantheon where the divine is split between spectacle and slouch: one figure reclines in a buoyant, pastel void, while another sits enthroned below, framed by striped drapery and festooned lights like a temporary festival shrine. Acid greens, hot pinks, and saturated blues collide with childlike linework, turning sacred iconography into pop theater—tridents, halos, and ritual objects reimagined as props in a contemporary, distracted ritual of consumption. The floating television and casual refreshments hover like new offerings, suggesting devotion redirected toward entertainment and appetite, yet the figures’ poised gestures retain a stubborn, ceremonial gravity. Space itself becomes an argument—weightless above, architectural below—mapping the tension between transcendence and everyday indulgence with mischievous reverence.







