



A vast, stippled multitude rises like a living tide, its glittering mosaic of color collapsing into anonymity as it funnels toward a single, monolithic bottle—an idol of consumption that absorbs attention and agency. The composition’s triangular surge and the soft, dusty light create a sense of inevitability, while the foreground’s jarring symbols—a toppled cylinder, a solitary throne perched on refuse, and a quiet tree—stage a moral theater of power, waste, and what remains untouched. In this uneasy balance between carnival hues and bleak objects, the work reads as a parable of mass desire: how crowds are choreographed by scarcity and spectacle, and how sovereignty is quietly relocated from people to products.







