


This work hovers between city and memory, where architectural hints dissolve into a luminous mist and the world feels half-glimpsed, half-invented. A broad veil of milky whites opens a quiet foreground, while ember reds and bruised ochres flare behind it like distant signals, warming the scene with restrained urgency. Vertical, shadowed forms anchor the composition as if they were towers or figures, yet their softened edges suggest transience—an urban presence sensed more than seen. The painting’s real subject becomes atmosphere itself: a meditation on how places persist in us as light, color, and fleeting impression rather than fixed detail.







