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Infinity Garden
Oil painting on canvas 100cm X 70cm, ready to hung with high quality, solid wood frame as can be seen on the photos.
At the edge of the world, where the sea touches the sky, there is a place known as the Infinity Garden. No maps show it, yet it appears to those who still believe that life is shared, not owned.
The garden opens with an endless pool reflecting the sunset — a mirror of gold and living fire. Five great arches stand beyond the pool, forming an open sanctuary — a doorway without walls — reminding every visitor that true belonging needs no gates.
In this place, the old fears between species have dissolved.
A great chimpanzee sits peacefully at the water’s edge, holding a sleeping human baby boy against her chest with absolute tenderness. Her eyes are watchful and calm. Beside her, a smaller chimp curls close, listening to the slow rhythm of shared breathing — the universal language of safety.
Nearby, a black panther rests like living midnight, strong and silent. A second child, a baby girl sleeps against her side, protected by quiet power. She is not in dan here — she is courage made visible. Those who enter the Infinity Garden understand her meaning: fear becomes wisdom when it is faced, not fought.
No one remembers who arrived first — human or animal — because in this place the question no longer matters.
The arches are called the Five Infinities:
Infinity of Earth.
Infinity of Love.
Infinity of Light
Infinity of Care.
Infinity of Creativity.
Together they form a circle without beginning or end.
Here, knowledge is not dominant but listening. Humans learned that animals think, feel, dream, and grieve. Animals learned that humans can choose gentleness over control.
Children are raised by many kinds of hands. Stress dissolves in shared presence. Healing happens through touch, trust, and companionship.
The sea beyond the arches never ends. The sky never closes. And the reflection in the pool shows a truth simple enough for a child to understand:
Life survives not through separation — but through relationships.
Oil painting on canvas 100cm X 70cm, ready to hung with high quality, solid wood frame as can be seen on the photos.
At the edge of the world, where the sea touches the sky, there is a place known as the Infinity Garden. No maps show it, yet it appears to those who still believe that life is shared, not owned.
The garden opens with an endless pool reflecting the sunset — a mirror of gold and living fire. Five great arches stand beyond the pool, forming an open sanctuary — a doorway without walls — reminding every visitor that true belonging needs no gates.
In this place, the old fears between species have dissolved.
A great chimpanzee sits peacefully at the water’s edge, holding a sleeping human baby boy against her chest with absolute tenderness. Her eyes are watchful and calm. Beside her, a smaller chimp curls close, listening to the slow rhythm of shared breathing — the universal language of safety.
Nearby, a black panther rests like living midnight, strong and silent. A second child, a baby girl sleeps against her side, protected by quiet power. She is not in dan here — she is courage made visible. Those who enter the Infinity Garden understand her meaning: fear becomes wisdom when it is faced, not fought.
No one remembers who arrived first — human or animal — because in this place the question no longer matters.
The arches are called the Five Infinities:
Infinity of Earth.
Infinity of Love.
Infinity of Light
Infinity of Care.
Infinity of Creativity.
Together they form a circle without beginning or end.
Here, knowledge is not dominant but listening. Humans learned that animals think, feel, dream, and grieve. Animals learned that humans can choose gentleness over control.
Children are raised by many kinds of hands. Stress dissolves in shared presence. Healing happens through touch, trust, and companionship.
The sea beyond the arches never ends. The sky never closes. And the reflection in the pool shows a truth simple enough for a child to understand:
Life survives not through separation — but through relationships.