


Refraction Garden
Refraction Garden is a layered digital collage where geometry, landscape, and color converge in an otherworldly prism. At its center, overlapping translucent circles ripple like twin water lilies or mirrored portals—each reflecting a fragment of nature: ponds, petals, trees, and light. These twin orbs glow with soft aquas and whites, encased in a shifting grid of rectangles and semicircles that resemble fractured glass or abstracted architecture.
Beneath and around these focal circles, hidden imagery flickers through: a wooden pathway, distant gardens, perhaps even statues or reflections caught mid-shift. The cool left side meets the warmer, reddish right, and a thin vertical white line divides the piece like a horizon or axis mundi—offering the viewer a cross-section of two realms.
The olive-green square behind the orbs adds a grounding earth tone, like a patch of mossy earth at the base of something sacred or mechanical. Refraction Garden feels like a visual echo—a place where memory and perception split, realigning into kaleidoscopic harmony.
This piece invites viewers to meditate on the layered nature of seeing: how environments, emotions, and time all overlap in how we witness the world—and ourselves.
Refraction Garden is a layered digital collage where geometry, landscape, and color converge in an otherworldly prism. At its center, overlapping translucent circles ripple like twin water lilies or mirrored portals—each reflecting a fragment of nature: ponds, petals, trees, and light. These twin orbs glow with soft aquas and whites, encased in a shifting grid of rectangles and semicircles that resemble fractured glass or abstracted architecture.
Beneath and around these focal circles, hidden imagery flickers through: a wooden pathway, distant gardens, perhaps even statues or reflections caught mid-shift. The cool left side meets the warmer, reddish right, and a thin vertical white line divides the piece like a horizon or axis mundi—offering the viewer a cross-section of two realms.
The olive-green square behind the orbs adds a grounding earth tone, like a patch of mossy earth at the base of something sacred or mechanical. Refraction Garden feels like a visual echo—a place where memory and perception split, realigning into kaleidoscopic harmony.
This piece invites viewers to meditate on the layered nature of seeing: how environments, emotions, and time all overlap in how we witness the world—and ourselves.