THE STORY OF TWO WOLVES
Some bonds are so settled they can afford to look away. Two gray wolves stand close, one just behind the other, facing opposite directions. It's a portrait of a pack's quiet architecture. Wolves survive by exactly this: shared vigilance, each one watching a different horizon so nothing approaches unseen. They aren't looking at each other because they don't need to. The trust has long been there. The work now is to face outward, together. The feeling it brings is companionship without clinging — two who guard each other's blind spots precisely by looking away. For anyone who's built that kind of bond with a partner, a sister, a lifelong friend, the recognition is immediate.
ROOM SUGGESTION
A shared bedroom, a couple’s space, or an entryway — it reads as partnership and mutual guard, a quiet portrait of two who face the world back to back.
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.