

A brooding expanse of sky presses down upon a low, fractured cityline, where ochres and mossy greens flicker like memory rather than architecture. The composition holds a tense equilibrium—heavy atmosphere above, restless strata below—so that the settlement feels both resilient and transient, as if it might dissolve back into the earth at any moment. Light is treated as sediment, pooling in smeared highlights and broken planes, suggesting a landscape shaped as much by time and weather as by human intention. In its ambiguity, the work becomes a meditation on habitation: the quiet persistence of structures beneath an indifferent, encroaching vastness.







