I can't say that the price is justified or anything like that, but as I study it, it becomes more appealing to me. In some ways it's very DMT-like. The actual aesthetic, perhaps not so much (save the floating wire-frame geometry) but the concept as I perceive it is pretty cool. You can judge the angle of your perspective relative to the figure by the background "poles". You see that as your angle changes, the person's appearance changes to that of the wolf. DMT (and the godhead from my experiences in particular) can and like to do this as well. With the godhead for example, I've spoken about this effect exactly that the artist here captures. With the slightest rotation in angle and perspective, the geometry (though itself stationary) appears to transform into something else entirely, but the geometry has remained completely still, and it only you and your perspective that has moved. This seems perhaps to be a property of holograms, and not just the fancy DMT ones either. You can easily grasp this concept with one of those holographic 2D cards where the image appears to move or change, based on how you tilt the card toward or away from you. Similarly with DMT, the plane that you are on changes relative to the geometry, and this creates the illusion that there is motion, even though there is not, as can be seen in the example with the 2D card where the card (or plane) may be moving, but the actual pixels on the card that contain the visual information are not actually reconfiguring themselves or moving freely or anything of the sort. In the case of this artwork, there is probably more symbolism here as well with the human transforming into the wolf (or animal). If we keep the hologram analogy going, then it would mean that in this painting, the entity represented is both human and beast at the same time, and it is merely perspective and relativity that affect the way you perceive that entity.
"Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind" - Albert Einstein
"The Mighty One appears, the horizon shines. Atum appears on the smell of his censing, the Sunshine- god has risen in the sky, the Mansion of the pyramidion is in joy and all its inmates are assembled, a voice calls out within the shrine, shouting reverberates around the Netherworld." - Egyptian Book of the Dead
"Man fears time, but time fears the Pyramids" - 9th century Arab proverb