



Suspended within the generous canopy of a single tree, the reclining figure transforms nature into a private chamberβan intimate bed held aloft by dense, patterned foliage that reads like a protective cosmology. The flattened perspective and meticulous repetition of leaf and roof motifs fuse dwelling and wilderness, suggesting how memory builds its own architecture of safety even as it hovers above the groundβs sparse, bench-like remnants. Color becomes psychological: the warm red of the body and the cool greens of the cot create a quiet tension between vulnerability and shelter, turning this airborne rest into a meditation on belonging, refuge, and the precarious grace of being held.







