



A ceremonial tableau unfolds with almost icon-like symmetry: a crimson, donkey-headed figure presides at the center, framed by a chorus of zebra bodies whose repeating stripes become both ornament and enclosure. Against a cool, patterned ground, the saturated reds and golds read as a crown of contested authority—pageantry that dazzles even as it hints at performance, disguise, and the fragile mechanics of power. The rope-like band and heart motifs stitch the assembly together like a public ritual of belonging, yet the figures’ anonymity and mask-like faces suggest a society rehearsing identity rather than inhabiting it. In this interplay of meticulous patterning and theatrical color, the work quietly asks whether sovereignty is earned, inherited, or simply staged.







