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Your Guardian (after Hecate)
When you stand between who you were
and who you are becoming, I keep watch.
40 × 42 in | Oil on canvas | 2026 | Includes framing
Hecate is the guardian of thresholds — the quiet ruler of the in-between.
In mythology, she watches over crossroads, doorways, and moments of transformation. She belongs to the spaces where one life ends, and another begins.
Here, the figure leans between two directions at once: past and future held in a single body, while her gaze remains fixed in the present. Movement and stillness coexist.
Painted in black and white against a dark sepia field, she appears both disheveled and sovereign. The lines behind her bend and scatter, as though time itself were folding toward her face.
No torches. No keys. No mythological symbols.
Only presence.
In this portrait, Hecate is not a frightening goddess of witchcraft, but a protector — the quiet figure who watches over us when we step into the unknown.
When you stand between who you were
and who you are becoming, I keep watch.
40 × 42 in | Oil on canvas | 2026 | Includes framing
Hecate is the guardian of thresholds — the quiet ruler of the in-between.
In mythology, she watches over crossroads, doorways, and moments of transformation. She belongs to the spaces where one life ends, and another begins.
Here, the figure leans between two directions at once: past and future held in a single body, while her gaze remains fixed in the present. Movement and stillness coexist.
Painted in black and white against a dark sepia field, she appears both disheveled and sovereign. The lines behind her bend and scatter, as though time itself were folding toward her face.
No torches. No keys. No mythological symbols.
Only presence.
In this portrait, Hecate is not a frightening goddess of witchcraft, but a protector — the quiet figure who watches over us when we step into the unknown.
About the Divine Outcast collection
Divine Outcast is a series of feminist portraits reimagining women from mythology, religion, and art history whose stories were distorted by fear, shame, or misunderstanding. Each painting restores their voice, presenting them not as symbols or warnings, but as powerful women reclaiming their own narratives.