"A sight rhyme (or eye rhyme) is a poetic device wherein two words are spelled similarly but pronounced differently. You can find a similar kind of play in painting, where one object can be reminiscent of another one. The result is a kind of visual rhyme that complicates the painting's meaning. In Picasso's Guernica, a glowing lamp that illuminates the scene below doubles as a seeing eye, watching the violence unfold while also staring out to meet the viewer's gaze. My two paintings are a riff on this motif, showing both a bird bath and a pedestal sink overflowing like a pair of weeping eyes."
— Danielle Orchard, excerpt from Ellemen China, 2024