



A quiet theatricality unfolds across the pond’s surface: pale lotus blossoms open like small sanctuaries, their blush edges catching a softened light that feels more remembered than observed. Against this hush, the saturated blues of the oversized bloom and lily pads create a deep stage on which the butterflies’ violet, amber, and gold become fleeting pulses of time—beauty in transit, never fully held. The bird, poised at the flower’s rim, anchors the composition with watchful stillness, turning the scene into a meditation on balance between ephemerality and repose. In its layered petals and hovering wings, the work suggests renewal not as spectacle, but as a continual, delicate reawakening.







