

This surreal tableau suspends a solitary fish in a twilight sea, its body erupting into a froth of pale bubbles that rises like a fragile monument—part breath, part prayer—toward a sky mottled with drifting white specks. Above the horizon, antler-like arcs unfurl in symmetrical tension, suggesting both a crown and a net, as if nature’s instincts have been reshaped into emblems of capture and uneasy triumph. The composition cleaves the world into strata—depth, shoreline, and atmosphere—yet the luminous column bridges them, turning the creature into a conduit between submerged memory and a distant, industrial-green skyline. In the cool blues and bruised violets, the work reads as an elegy for a habitat under pressure, where wonder persists but is inseparable from impending disappearance.







