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36 x 36 oil on gallery wrap canvas
Limited Edition Giclees available
Chiron draws from the Greek myth of the wounded healer—a figure who transforms pain into healing. At the center stands a serene woman among hollyhocks and a swarm of bees, symbols of Spring’s cycle of labor, sacrifice, and renewal.
Her flowing hair speaks of freedom; her bare chest and throat wound, from which honey and blood mingle, embody the tension between nurture and cost. The bees are drawn to what she offers—echoing how others are pulled to those who give without pause.
This piece reflects the quiet strength and deep generosity often carried by women, and the unseen toll of that giving. Chiron is a meditation on the beauty and burden of selflessness—on wounds that become offerings, and the resilience that endures in their wake.
36 x 36 oil on gallery wrap canvas
Limited Edition Giclees available
Chiron draws from the Greek myth of the wounded healer—a figure who transforms pain into healing. At the center stands a serene woman among hollyhocks and a swarm of bees, symbols of Spring’s cycle of labor, sacrifice, and renewal.
Her flowing hair speaks of freedom; her bare chest and throat wound, from which honey and blood mingle, embody the tension between nurture and cost. The bees are drawn to what she offers—echoing how others are pulled to those who give without pause.
This piece reflects the quiet strength and deep generosity often carried by women, and the unseen toll of that giving. Chiron is a meditation on the beauty and burden of selflessness—on wounds that become offerings, and the resilience that endures in their wake.
36 x 36 oil on gallery wrap canvas
Limited Edition Giclees available
Chiron draws from the Greek myth of the wounded healer—a figure who transforms pain into healing. At the center stands a serene woman among hollyhocks and a swarm of bees, symbols of Spring’s cycle of labor, sacrifice, and renewal.
Her flowing hair speaks of freedom; her bare chest and throat wound, from which honey and blood mingle, embody the tension between nurture and cost. The bees are drawn to what she offers—echoing how others are pulled to those who give without pause.
This piece reflects the quiet strength and deep generosity often carried by women, and the unseen toll of that giving. Chiron is a meditation on the beauty and burden of selflessness—on wounds that become offerings, and the resilience that endures in their wake.