



A dense frieze of masked faces becomes a living map of nations, where flags pressed to mouths suggest identity as both language and gag—an emblem of solidarity that can just as easily mute the individual. Against a calm, neutral field, the crowd’s ornamental rhythms and jewel-like colors carry the ceremonial weight of folklore, yet the airborne arrows and viral motifs pierce the scene with a quiet, contemporary violence. The composition reads as a single organism—touching, adjusting, tending—capturing how intimacy and contagion share the same gestures, and how survival rewrites the grammar of community.







