

This watercolor city scene elevates vernacular architecture into a quiet monument, where stacked roofs and tiered silhouettes rise like a memory held in disciplined geometry. A cool, mist-laden sky dissolves the distance while warm ochres and broken whites catch the light on plastered walls, suggesting time’s patina rather than polished permanence. The figures at street level are rendered as softened shadows—transient witnesses whose movement contrasts the steadiness of the built form—so the work reads as a meditation on daily life passing through inherited space. Fluid washes and granulated textures allow edges to breathe, letting atmosphere, history, and human presence mingle without insisting on certainty.







