

A monumental fish drifts across a cool, mosaic-like sea, its scales rendered as repeating, iridescent cells that turn the body into a living archive of texture and time. Within the fish’s head, a small domestic scene unfolds—figures gathered in quiet labor—suggesting memory and sustenance held inside the very creature that sustains them. The composition hinges on a tender paradox: the fish is both icon and vessel, its weighty silhouette containing human intimacy while the surrounding blue field dissolves into patterned currents that feel at once protective and distancing. Light moves subtly across the scaled surface, turning repetition into reverie and framing the work as a meditation on consumption, caretaking, and the stories we carry beneath the skin.







