



A turbulent canopy of geckos cascades downward like living embers, their speckled bodies braided into a single, restless tide that thickens toward the center before dissolving into red, root-like filaments. Beneath this fevered descent, a band of green grasshoppers lies compressed and watchful, their cool, lacquered hues forming a fragile threshold against the painting’s rising heat. The composition reads as an ecological parable—predation and proliferation rendered with obsessive patterning—where the same lines that suggest sheltering grass also become snares, turning the landscape into a theatre of inevitability. In this charged collision of vermilion and acid green, nature is not pastoral but incandescent, a system of appetite and survival that entangles everything it touches.







