

In this quiet still life, a blue-and-white ceramic vase rises like a preserved memory against a burnished, earthen ground, its cool floral motifs breathing calm into the surrounding warmth. The light falls gently from the right, skimming the rim and shoulder to reveal a tactile glaze while allowing the background to dissolve into a velvety haze, so the object feels both present and slightly dreamlike. The fallen roses at its base—softly bruised, already surrendering—introduce a tender narrative of transience, as if beauty is being measured not by its bloom but by its lingering trace. The composition holds an elegant tension between permanence and decay, inviting contemplation of what we keep, what fades, and what remains luminous in the act of looking.







