



This work stages the city as a luminous collision of memory and modern velocity, where temple-like silhouettes rise from a haze of high-rises in a single, declarative blaze of vermilion. Electric violets and acid greens compress the street into a trembling corridor, as if the air itself were wired with signals—cables, crossings, and murmured movement—binding sacred geometry to everyday circuitry. The broad white sky functions less as atmosphere than as a pause, a held breath that throws the saturated architecture into heightened relief and suggests a metropolis perpetually becoming. In its layered drips and sharp-edged planes, the painting proposes an urban spirituality: devotion not to quiet, but to intensity, flux, and the persistent glow of place.







