


A stylized Ganesha unfurls as a layered cut‑paper apparition, its interlocking forms hovering with soft shadows that make the figure feel both assembled and dreamt into being. The cool indigo ground quiets the scene while sudden embers of vermilion and saffron surge through the lower arcs, suggesting vitality pulsing beneath ceremonial restraint. Floral arabesques wrap the body like inherited script—ornament becoming memory—so the deity reads as a vessel of tradition continually reconfigured. With the raised trunk and luminous halo, the work turns devotion into design: an icon of auspicious beginnings rendered as a contemporary meditation on fragmentation and wholeness.







