



The figure of Ganesha emerges from a field of sepia-toned fragments, as if memory and myth are being reassembled in real time, each broken plane of light carrying a quiet devotional charge. The elongated trunk becomes a luminous axis that gathers the composition inward, stabilizing the restless, sketch-like crosshatching with a single, contemplative breath. Warm ochres and browns read like aged parchment, suggesting tradition not as fixed icon but as living matterβeroded, revised, and still radiant. In this balance between dissolution and clarity, the work frames divinity as an intimate presence that persists through uncertainty, offering steadiness without spectacle.







