



Four elongated figures drift across a field of sunflowers like successive moments of one interior thought, their downcast eyes and gently inclined heads turning the scene into a quiet ritual of attention. Against a burnished, stippled ground that reads as both earth and memory, the saturated garments—violet, coral, rose, and teal—create a measured cadence, while the single sunflower held aloft becomes a small, radiant emblem of held feeling. The repetition of forms suggests sisterhood or self-multiplication, a meditation on identity as something braided—like the dark hair—between presence and withdrawal. Light is not cast so much as inherited from the flowers themselves, turning abundance into contemplation and making tenderness the work’s true horizon.







