



A peacock stands like a jeweled punctuation mark in a field of weathered ground, its cobalt and emerald plumage breaking the earthen hush with a quiet insistence on beauty. Around it, humble vessels and scattered fragments form a small altar of daily life, while the cropped edges of patterned cloth and bare feet suggest unseen presencesβwitnesses to a ritual that is ordinary yet reverent. The surface is worked into dense, tactile notation, as if memory itself has been pressed into the earth, and thin crimson slashes cut through the scene like fleeting impulses of desire or warning. In this suspended moment, the natural icon of grace becomes both guardian and mirror, reflecting how splendor persists amid the worn textures of lived experience.







