

This stylized woodland tableau stages a quiet covenant between creature and canopy, where a reclining deer-like form nestles into the trunk’s embrace as if sheltered by an ancestral guardian. The composition is built from meticulous patterning—beaded dots, stitched lines, and rhythmic leaf-forms—that turns bark and hide into tapestries, suggesting that nature is not merely observed but patiently woven. Saturated greens and deep indigo-crimsons create a ceremonial contrast, allowing the white ground to function like breath or silence around the figures, amplifying their stillness. Beneath its folk clarity, the work reads as a meditation on belonging: protection as ornament, and ornament as memory carried through living forms.







