Twelve flowers, twelve moods. In this grid-based work, each cell holds a stylized bloom rendered in a palette of soft blues, lavenders, and sage greens — familiar enough to read as a garden, original enough to make you look twice.
The forms borrow from folk art and vintage botanical illustration, then quietly veer into something more personal. Some blossoms are open and serene. Others hold their shape with a certain quirky resolve. The striped, architectural bloom at center feels like it arrived from somewhere else entirely and decided to stay.
Together, they suggest what any real garden knows: that what we tend doesn't always grow the way we planned, and that's exactly what makes it worth keeping.
- Subject Matter: Abstract Still Life