

A lone, crowned figure—part deity, part guardian—steps forward beneath a fragile umbrella of thorny ribs, its arc both shelter and silent indictment, while a masked procession compresses into a single, breathless line. The palette’s restraint and the insistence of graphite greys turn the crowd into a shared weight of anonymity, interrupted only by the saffron-patterned garment and peacock-feather halo that insist on moral attention. Negative space above the march becomes an emptied sky, amplifying the sense of displacement and suspended time, as if compassion must be carried like contraband through crisis. In this tension between sanctity and scarcity, the work reads as a meditation on dignity under duress—where care is present, yet precarious, and survival moves forward one burden at a time.