

Against a burnished saffron field, a precarious city of turquoise and violet prisms rises like a constructed memory—part skyline, part toy architecture—its crisp outlines containing weathered textures that feel borrowed from lived walls. Small house-icons drift through the open space with the logic of dreams, turning habitation into a floating vocabulary of belonging and dislocation. The pale, root-like mass entering from above reads as both sheltering canopy and invasive presence, suggesting how the forces that “hold” a place together can also unsettle it. Light is not modeled but declared through color contrasts, creating a suspended, theatrical calm where urban ambition and domestic intimacy hover in uneasy balance.







