

A tight cluster of stylized faces presses together like a single organism, their half-lidded eyes carrying the quiet fatigue of a shared dream while sea-creatures and fronds braid through them as if memory were aquatic and porous. The composition reads as a living reef—dense, protective, and intimate—where fish glide across foreheads and shoulders, dissolving the boundary between human identity and the larger ecology that sustains it. Muted earth-tones cradle electric blues and purples, so the scene feels both subterranean and ceremonial, suggesting a myth of belonging in which the self is not solitary but interdependent, threaded into currents beyond speech.