STORY OF THE LYNX
She lifted her head and held me in her gaze — tongue still at her lip from a fresh-caught meal. She had just fed, and it showed: not in anything she did, but in what she didn't. No hurry to look away, no need to explain the kill. Her gold eyes face forward like ours, which is why her stare lands as a stare and not a glance — the architecture of a hunter who measures distance for a living. But what holds you isn't the predator. It's the satisfaction. This creature is wholly content in her own body and with her own appetite, owing apology to no one — least of all for being hungry, and for feeding herself. It's a portrait of female self-possession dressed in fur, not fashion. Stand in front of her long enough and you stop apologizing too.
ROOM SUGGESTION
A primary bedroom or a private dressing area — somewhere personal, where that unwavering gaze becomes a daily reminder of your own quiet authority.
FINISHES & SIZING
This piece comes in three curated sizes and three museum-quality finishes. Metal is my signature recommendation — it holds the depth, light, and dimensional clarity of the original encounter. Acrylic pushes further into luminous, high-impact territory for a true statement piece. And pearl finish photo paper adds a soft, pearlescent shimmer unique among archival papers — beautiful framed under glass.
Need a custom size, finish, diptych, triptych, or installation for a specific wall? Custom sizing is available by request.
TRADE
Trade inquiries are welcome for designers, consultants, wellness spaces, medical offices, hospitality projects, and multi-piece installations.