At first glance, Clara looks like someone caught halfway between waking and dreaming. Her features are soft and luminous, framed by a halo of dark curls that catch the light like brushstrokes of gold and shadow. There’s grace in how she carries herself — poised yet uncertain, as if afraid the ground beneath her might not hold. Her eyes are deep and dark, restless pools that seem to watch the world for patterns no one else can see.
When she speaks, her voice is quiet but deliberate, the words chosen carefully, as though language itself were a fragile medium she’s still learning to handle. She dresses simply — often with streaks of paint on her fingers or the faint scent of turpentine clinging to her — but her presence fills a room in subtle ways. The air near her feels charged, as if reality bends slightly around her perception.
Lately, there’s a tension in her — a haunted stillness that makes even her silences feel heavy. Sleep hasn’t come easily, and her art has grown stranger: canvases layered in shapes that seem to move when viewed from the corner of one’s eye. To Sleepwalkers and Awakened alike, Clara radiates the faint, dangerous beauty of someone who is caught between this reality and another - though whether that reality will consume, destroy, or uplift her.