

Two women are rendered with a quiet, frontal stillness, their elongated forms and half-lidded gazes turning portraiture into meditation—less about likeness than about lived endurance. Warm ochres and saffron cloth patterns radiate like domestic suns against the cool, geometric blues, creating a gentle tension between heritage and the present moment. The stone wall and spare tree function as humble guardians, anchoring the figures in a rural architecture of memory, while the small red blossoms—held and gathered—become emblems of care, continuity, and unspoken kinship.







