



A rain-washed avenue stretches forward like a corridor of memory, where blue monoliths of architecture dissolve into mist and the city’s weight becomes almost weightless. Loose, calligraphic strokes for streetlamps and figures create a fragile rhythm against the watery ground, while red accents flare like brief pulses of urgency—tail-lights, signals, a flag—punctuating the hush. The reflective pavement doubles the scene, turning movement into an echo and suggesting how urban life is lived twice: once in real time and once in the lingering afterimage of weather and light. In this softened geometry, solitude and procession coexist, as if the metropolis itself is quietly exhaling.







