

Two fish, rendered in patinated metal and warm, ribbed copper-like plates, glide in a poised diagonal that reads as both current and choreography—movement suspended just before it becomes escape. The dialogue between cool oxidized surfaces and earthen tones turns the bodies into small topographies, suggesting endurance and adaptation rather than mere naturalism. Set against a void-like ground, the pair becomes emblematic: a quiet allegory of companionship and synchronized survival, where forward motion is less about speed than shared direction.