

This watercolor city scene is built from warm ochres and umbers that dissolve architecture into atmosphere, letting light behave like memory rather than mere illumination. The colonnade’s deep shadows and the upward pull of balconies create a quiet theatrical space where small figures—almost incidental—become the measure of scale, history, and daily endurance. Loose, decisive washes leave edges unresolved, suggesting a place continually remade by heat, time, and movement, while the converging street draws the eye inward like a passage between public ritual and private life. In its balance of openness and enclosure, the work reads as a meditation on how communities inhabit old stone—turning monumental façades into lived, breathing cadence.







