Thunnus - watercolor and cut paper
Thunnus is a 16x20” piece created in watercolor and cut paper on watercolor board. A swirling constellation of gesture and intention, this piece is part of the “Murmurations” strand of the Collective Humanity series. Its layered forms ripple outward in a continuous spiral—evoking the collective intelligence of a tuna shoal (Thunnus), or the choreography of beings in tuned response to one another.
The radial motion invites stillness and motion at once—a sense of listening while moving, of protecting the center while expanding outward. This piece speaks to the way communal care creates safety: not by isolating, but by embracing. Thunnus asks: What happens when we move together, in trust, without hierarchy or hesitation?
Ships flat.
Thunnus is a 16x20” piece created in watercolor and cut paper on watercolor board. A swirling constellation of gesture and intention, this piece is part of the “Murmurations” strand of the Collective Humanity series. Its layered forms ripple outward in a continuous spiral—evoking the collective intelligence of a tuna shoal (Thunnus), or the choreography of beings in tuned response to one another.
The radial motion invites stillness and motion at once—a sense of listening while moving, of protecting the center while expanding outward. This piece speaks to the way communal care creates safety: not by isolating, but by embracing. Thunnus asks: What happens when we move together, in trust, without hierarchy or hesitation?
Ships flat.
Thunnus is a 16x20” piece created in watercolor and cut paper on watercolor board. A swirling constellation of gesture and intention, this piece is part of the “Murmurations” strand of the Collective Humanity series. Its layered forms ripple outward in a continuous spiral—evoking the collective intelligence of a tuna shoal (Thunnus), or the choreography of beings in tuned response to one another.
The radial motion invites stillness and motion at once—a sense of listening while moving, of protecting the center while expanding outward. This piece speaks to the way communal care creates safety: not by isolating, but by embracing. Thunnus asks: What happens when we move together, in trust, without hierarchy or hesitation?
Ships flat.