

Framed by a brick arch, this sepia-toned tableau stages a quiet confrontation between built history and living ecology: an old bridge and clustered towers recede into a moonlit haze while a heron’s vigilant profile anchors the present tense of the riverbank. The composition tilts like a lens between worlds—above, stonework and engineering; below, a circular “window” of water where fish drift through rising bubbles and coral-like growths, as if memory itself were sedimenting into form. Light behaves like a moral atmosphere, glazing the architecture with reverence yet staining the underwater sphere with amber weight, suggesting a fragile pact between human monument and the submerged, unseen systems that sustain it. The bird’s poised beak becomes a metronome of time and appetite, implying that survival and stewardship are inseparable in this layered, dreamlike ecology.







