

A vermilion trunk rises like a living calligraphy against a sun-saturated field, its branching arms holding a halo of pale blossoms that seem to flicker between presence and dissolution. The thick, tactile surface turns the yellow ground into an atmosphere rather than a backdrop—heat, memory, and light compressed into pigment—while the clustered whites and soft violets read as breath or ash drifting at the edge of celebration. In this simplified silhouette, nature becomes emblem: a solitary figure offering tenderness and resilience, insisting on renewal even as the petals fragment into luminous noise.







