Temple of Earth, 2025, oil on canvas, 90 × 90 cm
Temple of Earth explores the sacred bond between humanity and the natural world. By merging human presence with botanical forms, the painting suggests that nature itself is alive with spirit, memory, and consciousness. The flowers become more than just blooms, they are witnesses, protectors, and carriers of vision, reminding us that the human and the earthly are not separate but intertwined.
The title speaks to the idea of the landscape as a sanctuary, a place where growth, fertility, and transformation are worshipped in their own right. Rather than depicting a man-made temple, the work proposes that the earth itself is holy, that every river, tree, and blossom forms part of a living shrine.
This painting is a meditation on reverence: an invitation to see the world not as a backdrop to human life, but as a sacred force in which we are rooted.
Temple of Earth, 2025, oil on canvas, 90 × 90 cm
Temple of Earth explores the sacred bond between humanity and the natural world. By merging human presence with botanical forms, the painting suggests that nature itself is alive with spirit, memory, and consciousness. The flowers become more than just blooms, they are witnesses, protectors, and carriers of vision, reminding us that the human and the earthly are not separate but intertwined.
The title speaks to the idea of the landscape as a sanctuary, a place where growth, fertility, and transformation are worshipped in their own right. Rather than depicting a man-made temple, the work proposes that the earth itself is holy, that every river, tree, and blossom forms part of a living shrine.
This painting is a meditation on reverence: an invitation to see the world not as a backdrop to human life, but as a sacred force in which we are rooted.