Fragment of a Changing Earth
This body of work unfolds as a visual meditation on transformation tracing the fragile dialogue between nature and human existence in the era of climate change. Through a synthesis of still life, landscape, and mixed-media interventions, the series navigates the threshold where the tangible dissolves into the metaphorical. Set within the coastal belt of southern Bangladesh one of the most climate vulnerable regions in the world the project reinterprets environmental crisis not through catastrophe, but through metamorphosis. Rather than documenting visible disasters, it visualizes the silent shifts: soil turning saline, roots becoming memory, and water reclaiming what once was land. The environment here is not merely a subject but a presence a living archive of time, erosion, and memory. Here, the environment is not merely a subject but a presence a living archive of time, erosion, and memory. Each image emerges as a reconstruction of the invisible processes that shape both earth and emotion. Soil, salt, rust, and water become recurring motifs: metaphors of endurance, decay, and renewal. The familiar turns symbolic a cracked vessel may echo a coastline, a wilted leaf may resemble a displaced home. This work resists the spectacle of disaster and instead embraces the subtler poetics of change where emptiness becomes testimony and silence becomes narrative. By blending material and image, reality and interpretation, the series invites contemplation rather than conclusion. At its core, Elegy of Transformation seeks to redefine how we perceive environmental loss not as an end, but as a process of becoming. It is an elegy and a dialogue between loss and adaptation, between human breath and planetary rhythm. In the space between destruction and rebirth, the work reminds us that the earth does not vanish; it transforms and so do we.