



This watercolor city-edge unfurls like a quiet breath at daybreak, where warm ochres and rusted reds of the riverfront architecture dissolve into a pale, luminous sky. The composition privileges negative space—an expansive wash of water that turns the built world into a fragile silhouette—so that reflections and softened edges become metaphors for memory more than documentation. Small boats and slender verticals punctuate the horizon with human scale, suggesting a lived rhythm beneath the grand façade, while the restrained palette carries a calm melancholy, as if the city is momentarily suspended between waking and fading.







