



A dense, circular field of tessellated petals hovers like a contained cosmos, its jubilant reds, ochres, whites, and blues pressed into a single, breathing disc against the cool hush of the ground. In front, the pale lotus blooms—rendered with tender gradients and soft luminosity—act as a quiet counterpoint, their fragile clarity insisting on stillness amid the riot of pattern. The crisp geometry framing the bouquet reads like a constructed stage, suggesting how nature is curated, cataloged, and yet never fully tamed, as if memory and ornament were attempting to hold the living world in place. The work oscillates between abundance and restraint, turning decorative repetition into a meditation on growth, containment, and the poise of serenity within excess.







