“Zenith” stands as a divine crescendo within the I Am Sistine collection — a visual hymn that explores transcendence, femininity, and sacred reclamation. The piece exudes an ethereal serenity, merging the celestial and the mortal into one sacred figure. Her face, crowned yet fractured, seems suspended between divinity and humanity — a saint reborn through pain and reverence. The hollowed eyes, rimmed with light, suggest awakening beyond the earthly veil, a return to spiritual sovereignty.
Encircling her are symbols of rebirth: butterflies drifting like silent prayers, flowers in full bloom rising from the ruins of devotion, and a dove ascending toward the light. The architectural elements evoke the Renaissance grandeur of sacred art — echoes of cathedrals, angels, and altarpieces — yet they are intertwined with a surreal modern melancholy. This blending of divine and broken beauty reflects the tension between worship and wound, holiness and human frailty.
Within the I Am Sistine coll