Encoded Garden

$500.00

Encoded Garden evokes the feeling of peering into a layered, botanical manuscript. The composition is a palimpsest of cellular structures, organic textures, and hidden botanical notations, rendered in mossy golds, earthy greens, and earthen ochres. It gives the impression of something both ancient and futuristic—like a forest floor viewed through a microscope, or a tapestry woven from DNA strands and wildflowers.

There’s an undertone of intentional concealment: diagrams of unknown purpose are faintly visible beneath transparent rectangles, as though classified knowledge has been softly buried beneath foliage and time. Floral embroidery and data-like patterns blur into one another, suggesting a conversation between technology and nature, or biology and symbology.

The piece radiates a hushed vitality—as if the image is quietly alive, encoded with secrets waiting to be read by someone fluent in both science and myth.

This work is a meditation on hidden wisdom—the language of nature that often goes unnoticed. It suggests that life, growth, and memory may be archived not only in genes and algorithms, but also in petals, spores, and loam. Encoded Garden invites the viewer to pause, decode, and wonder what stories are preserved in layers we rarely see.

Encoded Garden evokes the feeling of peering into a layered, botanical manuscript. The composition is a palimpsest of cellular structures, organic textures, and hidden botanical notations, rendered in mossy golds, earthy greens, and earthen ochres. It gives the impression of something both ancient and futuristic—like a forest floor viewed through a microscope, or a tapestry woven from DNA strands and wildflowers.

There’s an undertone of intentional concealment: diagrams of unknown purpose are faintly visible beneath transparent rectangles, as though classified knowledge has been softly buried beneath foliage and time. Floral embroidery and data-like patterns blur into one another, suggesting a conversation between technology and nature, or biology and symbology.

The piece radiates a hushed vitality—as if the image is quietly alive, encoded with secrets waiting to be read by someone fluent in both science and myth.

This work is a meditation on hidden wisdom—the language of nature that often goes unnoticed. It suggests that life, growth, and memory may be archived not only in genes and algorithms, but also in petals, spores, and loam. Encoded Garden invites the viewer to pause, decode, and wonder what stories are preserved in layers we rarely see.