

Three veiled women move in a quiet procession, their elongated profiles and lowered gazes turning the scene into a meditation on interior life rather than public display. Saturated reds and violets glow against a cool, nocturnal ground, as if the figures carry their own warmth through a field of softened geometry and drifting silhouettes. Flowers—held, offered, and gathered—become a tender counterpoint to the figures’ restraint, suggesting memory, devotion, and the fragile labor of care. The layered planes and faint architectural traces hint at a world both sheltering and enclosing, where tradition reads as protection and weight in the same breath.







