Tomato Loves Vegetables is a short, quiet visual story told through still images.
Set entirely in a domestic kitchen, it follows a tomato that no longer quite fits where it’s expected to belong. There is no dialogue, no faces, and no overt symbolism — just light, space, and small decisions unfolding across a series of illustrated frames.
The piece is designed to be watched slowly. Each image holds long enough for the viewer to notice what has shifted: where the camera sits, how the light changes, what is present, and what is no longer there. Meaning emerges through composition rather than explanation.
This work sits somewhere between a picture book, a storyboard, and a visual poem. It explores ideas of belonging, difference, and quiet courage without instruction or moral. The story does not ask to be decoded so much as inhabited.
Created as part of an ongoing exploration of minimal narrative, stillness, and non-verbal storytelling.
Acting
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