Description
The painting Collapse reflects on the inevitability of breakdown as a part of life. Again and again, we encounter seasons of collapse—relationships ending, careers shifting, health faltering—until, at last, we face our final collapse and the end of life itself. These moments are frightening and painful, and we naturally resist them.
Yet within every collapse lies the seed of renewal. Like the phoenix rising from its ashes, each ending holds the possibility of a beginning we might never have chosen without being pushed by life’s circumstances.
Inspired by the words of British philosophical writer James Allen (1864–1912), inscribed into the painting, Collapse echoes his insight and invites viewers to see endings not only as loss, but also as thresholds to transformation.
The dark’ning sorrow veils a star
That waits to shine with gladsome light;
Hell waits on heaven; and after night
Comes golden glory from afar.
Defeats are steps by which we climb
With purer aim to nobler ends;
Loss leads to gain, and joy attends
True footsteps up the hills of time


