

A vivid vermilion trunk rises like a living column through a field of weathered white, its saturated warmth cutting a decisive path amid scraped, palimpsestic textures that feel both scarred and cleansing. Around it, the canopy erupts into innumerable leaf-like shards—greens, blues, purples, and ember tones—forming a restless halo that reads as memory in motion, a chorus of small events held together by a single, unwavering axis. The composition balances rigor and overflow: the trunk’s vertical certainty anchors the painterly turbulence, suggesting resilience not as calmness but as a continual, radiant insistence to endure. In this tension between raw ground and jeweled foliage, nature becomes an inner architecture—an image of growth that is simultaneously celebration and survival.







