Motha Lisa
Motha Lisa exists somewhere between portrait, apparition, and landscape. A face emerges from darkness, not fully formed but overtaken by growth, memory, and transformation. Branch-like lines rise wildly from the figure’s head like roots, nerves, or thought patterns expanding beyond containment. Flowers and moths drift across the surface, softening and disrupting the boundaries between the human figure and the natural world.
The image developed through an intuitive process of layering and revision, allowing forms to appear gradually rather than being imposed through a fixed composition. The central face feels suspended between silence and revelation. Its pale, almost dissolving surface contrasts against the black background, creating the sensation that the figure is materializing from shadow or receding back into it.
The moths act as recurring messengers throughout the piece. Drawn to the mouth, eyes, and surrounding growth, they suggest vulnerability, attraction, decay, transformation, and spiritual migration all at once. Their movement across the image creates a shifting rhythm that pulls the viewer inward toward the dark opening of the mouth, where a larger moth appears almost like a spoken thought, an offering, or an emergence from the unconscious.
The chaotic flowering crown above the figure resists simple interpretation. It can be read as overgrowth, memory, psychic energy, grief, renewal, or the overwhelming accumulation of lived experience. Thin white lines weave upward like tangled pathways of thought or invisible currents connecting the figure to something beyond itself. Despite the density of detail, the image maintains an emotional stillness, as if caught in a suspended moment between growth and collapse.
Like much of David Ricketts’ work, Motha Lisa blends portraiture with symbolic improvisation. The image does not seek to explain itself directly. Instead, it invites prolonged observation, where fragments slowly reorganize into emotional associations unique to each viewer. The result is both intimate and otherworldly — a meditation on transformation, fragility, and the strange beauty that can emerge from inner chaos.