

A broad, quiet landscape unfurls in layered bands of greens and ochres, where the horizon’s gentle rise steadies the eye while the foreground dissolves into watery, mirrored depths. The painter punctuates this calm with sudden blooms of crimson and cobalt—small, insistent fires of color that feel less like botanical detail than emotional weather moving across the land. Light is handled as a soft veil rather than a beam, allowing trees to hover at the edge of clarity and suggesting memory’s way of smoothing contours while sharpening sensation. In this oscillation between solid field and shimmering reflection, the scene becomes a meditation on renewal: the earth holding both its muted endurance and its brief, vivid intensities.







