Description
This painting presents a celestial garden within a softly defined hexagonal field washed in pale pink. Abstract flowers and leaves circulate in layered magenta, violet, and blue, forming a wreath that suggests growth, return, and a space beyond time.
Within this movement, four divine figures subtly emerge, integrated into the surrounding color rather than set apart. Inspired by a Han Dynasty jade ring, they appear as luminous traces, echoing ancient spiritual presence rather than fixed form.
At the center is the word “Nothing,” written in Bird-and-Insect script, an ancient Chinese writing system dating back over 2,600 years believed to bridge heaven and earth. “Nothing” is not a philosophical endpoint but a generative origin. This central emptiness functions as a generative core, allowing the surrounding forms to arise and dissolve.
Balancing restraint and expression, the work reflects early Chinese ideas of divinity as embedded in nature and emptiness as origin. Rather than illustrating history. The work succeeds as a meeting point of ritual memory and contemporary abstraction, where color, symbol, and absence coexist in careful balance.
This artwork was exhibited in the exhibition CONTEMPORARY VENICE 18th Edition 2026 in Venice, Italy.

Reviews
There are no reviews yet.