Abstract painting with a large red circle surrounded by yellow and blue brushstrokes.

Cacoon

Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 6ft x 6ft
Creation Date: 2023
Collection: The Pulse of Life

Cacoon (2023) is a painting about becoming — the in-between state where something is not what it was, and not yet what it will be. Part of The Pulse of Life Collection, this 72 x 72 inch acrylic canvas captures a suspended moment of transformation, wrapped in energy and uncertainty.

The composition swirls around a central enclosure — not closed, but protective. Lines curl and cross like threads spun instinctively. The palette pulses with warm grays, vibrant orange, and spectral white, overlaid with brushstrokes that resemble both nest and net. The feeling is not of stillness, but of incubation.

I painted Cacoon while reflecting on change that doesn’t arrive with drama, but with quiet persistence — the kind that brews internally before anyone else sees it. It’s a painting of tension and trust. The shell holds, but not forever.

In tone and metaphor, this work resonates with the cocoon sculptures of Ernesto Neto, whose immersive forms offer shelter, softness, and slow emergence. Like Neto, I believe art can hold space for personal metamorphosis — not by directing, but by allowing.

The title’s deliberate misspelling — “Cacoon” instead of “Cocoon” — points to the imperfect, unformed nature of transformation itself. It’s not clinical. It’s instinctual. Messy. Unfinished.

As part of The Pulse of Life Collection, this painting offers a visual exhale — a resting place between versions of the self.