



Against a field of blazing red and sun-warmed ochre, the composition stages a poised tension between geometry and abundance: a transparent, angular plane hovers like a measured thought over a densely tessellated canopy of petal-like fragments. The circular mass reads as a modern “tree” of accumulated moments—color shards and leaf-forms interlocking into a living mosaic—while the soft buds below introduce a quieter, bodily tenderness that resists the painting’s sharp, architectonic cuts. Light is treated as structure rather than atmosphere, flattening space into layered emblems where growth appears simultaneously engineered and spontaneous, as if nature were being drafted into a new visual language. The work ultimately meditates on how vitality survives within systems—how the organic insists on blooming even when framed, pinned, and diagrammed.







