

Set against a saturated vermilion field, Ganesha appears not as a distant icon but as a living rhythmβpoised mid-step, his many arms articulating a choreography of protection, offering, and play. The flat, devotional space is enlivened by meticulous ornament and jewel-like accents, where golds and greens pulse against the red ground to suggest auspicious energy radiating outward. A delicate canopy of foliage frames the figure like a benediction, while the scattered white flecks read as petals or blessings, turning the surrounding emptiness into a charged atmosphere of arrival and removal of obstacles. In this balance of stillness and motion, the work becomes a meditation on abundance: grace made visible through pattern, symmetry, and luminous restraint.







