



A wide, hushed savannah stretches beneath a storm-burdened sky, where the herd becomes less a collection of bodies than a living texture—an undulating band of horns and backs stitched into the grass. The composition is built in calm horizontal strata—sky, distant ridge, open plain, and the darkened foreground—so that the viewer feels the slow pressure of weather and time, rather than the drama of a single event. Subtle tonal shifts from teal to charcoal temper the scene with restraint, suggesting migration as ritual and endurance, a collective breath held under the vastness above. In the small scale of the animals against the monumental atmosphere, the work quietly meditates on vulnerability and belonging within an indifferent landscape.







