



This monochrome watercolor composition stages a quiet dialogue between organic memory and constructed symbol: tulip-like silhouettes rise like distant sentinels while translucent leaves overlap a gridded square, suggesting nature briefly contained by human order. On the right, a mask-like totem emerges from vertical washes, its geometric markings and circular “eye” reading as an ancestral cipher—part guardian, part witness—set adrift in a field of restrained light. The drifting arcs and suspended fish forms stitch the scene into a single breath, turning empty space into a charged interval where presence is implied rather than declared. In its measured greys, the work proposes that meaning is not fixed but layered—washed in, erased, and re-inscribed with each passing tide of attention.







