



This work suspends an emergent architecture within a wash of submerged blues, where pigment behaves like weather—mist, tide, and memory collapsing into one atmosphere. The composition is weighted to the right, as if the city is arriving from the margins, its fractured whites and charcoal scaffolds flashing like distant lights caught in rain, then dissolving back into the void. Scratched lines and sedimented textures read as both construction and erasure, suggesting an urban presence that is perpetually assembling itself while already slipping into ruin. In its restrained palette and restless surface, the painting becomes a meditation on impermanence—how places persist not as fixed structures, but as shifting impressions held in water and time.







