Pan’s Feast was born from frustration and rediscovered through play. What began as an attempt to force abstraction became an unplanned return to imagination, memory, and childhood joy—where color, texture, and material collide in an act of remembering who we are beneath responsibility.

Inspired by the myth of Pan as both guardian and disruptor, this collection embraces contradiction. Pan represents instinct, vulnerability, and wildness, the parts of ourselves that resist containment yet demand care. Through this lens, Pan’s Feast becomes an offering, a visual language for emotional survival, healing, and the reclamation of softness as strength.

Pan’s Feast resists distance. It encourages intimacy, curiosity, and reflection, allowing viewers to project their own experiences of loss, growth, resilience, and renewal onto the work. Rather than offering a single reading, the pieces remain open and relational, becoming spaces where personal histories quietly intersect.

At its core, Pan’s Feast honors what it means to feel deeply and visibly in a world that often demands hardness. It acknowledges healing as nonlinear and imperfect, reminding us that vulnerability is not a weakness, but a form of strength.