



A monumental tree rises like a living axis through a sky that shifts from pale breath to nocturnal blue, its bark rendered in looping, tactile bands that turn growth into a kind of memory. Geometric wooden forms—part nest, part architecture—cling to the branches with uncanny precision, introducing the human impulse to build, measure, and contain into an organism that refuses straight lines. The diagonal composition suspends the scene between ascent and fall, making the small boxes feel like fragile intentions adrift in vast atmosphere. In the tension between organic swell and crafted edges, the work quietly meditates on belonging: how shelter can be both refuge and imposition, and how nature bears our structures while remaining irreducibly wild.







