

The composition stages a quiet confrontation between the human and the animal, rendered as interlocking profiles and horned silhouettes that press toward one another across a warm, earthen field. Turquoise borders and charcoal contours act like stained-glass leading, containing bursts of crimson, ochre, and cobalt that read as memory-fragments—sensations trapped inside archetypal forms. The repeated leaves become a soft, rhythmic veil, suggesting breath, ritual, or the persistence of nature threading through culture’s masks. In this tense yet lyrical proximity, the work proposes not dominance but communion: identity as something negotiated between instinct and reflection.







