



Against a radiant yellow field patterned like an ornamental wallpaper, the zebra becomes less an animal than a rhythmic module—its black-and-white bands repeating until individuality dissolves into procession. The composition’s lateral stretch reads like a frieze, where bodies interlock into a single undulating sentence, both orderly and faintly claustrophobic, as if nature has been drafted into design. This tension between wild identity and decorative system turns the stripes into a visual code: a meditation on sameness, seriality, and the quiet violence of being rendered pattern. The bright ground amplifies the work’s irony—sunlit and playful on the surface, yet conceptually attentive to how repetition can erase the singular.







