

In this monochrome hillside, terraced bands read like a patient inscription—human cultivation etched into the mountain’s vast, indifferent mass. The slanting light rakes across the lower slope, casting elongated shadows that turn trees into quiet sentinels and make the land feel both tended and watchful. Between the dense, textured forest and the geometric agriculture, the composition holds a tense harmony: an enduring negotiation between wilderness and settlement, where small roofs and paths become gestures of persistence against scale. The absence of color sharpens the piece into a study of memory and labor, as if the landscape itself is an archive of lives layered over time.