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Daisies are wildflowers

In “Daisies Are Wildflowers,” the image functions as a space of dissolution between subject and landscape. The female figure, recurring throughout the series, does not assert dominance over the environment but instead merges with it, challenging traditional hierarchies between body and nature. Daisies—humble and seemingly peripheral elements—operate here as a conceptual device. Rather than representing, they activate a reading centered on the essential, the overlooked, and the non-spectacular. Their repetition establishes a quiet visual language that shifts attention away from explicit narrative and toward emotional and perceptual states. Light, treated as a sensitive and almost tactile material, structures the viewer’s experience, generating atmospheres that oscillate between intimacy and transcendence. Within this framework, the series proposes contemplation as a form of resistance against the saturation of contemporary visual culture.