In Anahita, Gabrielle introduces us to a woman of immense inner stillness — named after the ancient Persian goddess of water and rebirth. Her expression is unwavering, her eyes fixed with a timeless strength that suggests she has seen many summers pass, and many more to come.
With golds woven into her hair like molten sunlight and earrings that echo old-world elegance, she becomes both contemporary and mythic. Gabrielle paints her not in action, but in pause — the sacred kind of silence that precedes transformation. She is summer as a sanctuary: powerful, peaceful, and patiently watching.