

Rendered in an austere black-and-white lexicon, the drawing stages a tender pact between woman and bird—an embrace that feels less like possession than a quiet act of guardianship. The composition is built from patient repetitions—stippling, stripes, and polka-dotted mushroom caps—that weave the figures into a single ornamental ecology, where touch becomes the primary source of light. Lotus pads and still water form a contemplative threshold, suggesting an inner landscape where fragility and resilience coexist, and where innocence is negotiated with the wild rather than sheltered from it. The bowed head and softened gaze anchor the scene in introspection, turning a fantastical wetland into an allegory of care, metamorphosis, and the ethics of closeness.







