

Suspended within a midnight circular field, a reclining figure unfurls like a constellation of limbs, its patterned skin vibrating against the void as if memory were trying to hold a body together. Thin, calligraphic lines—half vine, half pulse—bind the form to a sprouting cluster of red leaves, turning rest into germination and suggesting that vulnerability can be a kind of fertile ground. The composition pivots between weightlessness and tethering: the dark surround reads as both womb and abyss, while the acidic yellows and ember reds insist on life’s persistence even in isolation. What emerges is a quiet allegory of renewal—where the self, fragmented by experience, is rewoven by growth.







