



Suspended in a field of incandescent ochre, the monochrome figure appears to exhale into silence, her closed eyes holding a private interiority that the painting refuses to interrupt. Around her, butterflies—rendered with graphic precision yet distressed by painterly abrasion—become both guardians and emissaries, their flight tracing a choreography between fragility and insistence. The sharp oranges and blacks cut through the warmth like sudden memory, suggesting transformation not as spectacle but as a tender, recurring disturbance. In this tension between stillness and motion, the work reads as a meditation on becoming—where the self is porous, and metamorphosis arrives softly, on wings.







