

A nocturnal architecture floats like a remembered village suspended between earth and tide, its carved lines and stippled textures turning stone, foliage, and façade into a single woven surface. The deep indigo field—alive with rhythmic striations—presses in as both sky and psychological space, while the stark white passage at the center reads as a doorway of light, an opening where the mind can cross from enclosure to breath. Trees stand as quiet sentinels, their dark canopies anchoring the composition and suggesting that even in this constructed refuge, nature remains the true scaffolding of belonging. What emerges is a meditation on shelter and threshold: a place built from fragments, held together by pattern, memory, and the fragile insistence of illumination.







