



A serene, stone-gray Buddha emerges from a field of deep cobalt, his softened features and raised hand offering a quiet benediction while the crimson robe cuts through the stillness like a pulse of lived devotion. Around him, luminous lotus blossoms unfurl in silvery monochrome, their purity held against a ground that seems to weep downward in inky drips, suggesting impermanence and the slow erosion of all forms. The suspended vertical bars of saturated color read like modern interruptions—signals, mantras, or data—threading the sacred image with contemporary noise, yet never quite disturbing its calm center. In this tension between icon and abstraction, the painting becomes a meditation on how transcendence persists even as the world fragments into bright, fleeting fragments.







