

This watercolor city-street scene distills urban life into a quiet theater of light and wash, where architecture rises in pale, geometric planes while the crowd dissolves into soft silhouettes, more felt than defined. A broad, luminous foreground—nearly blank—acts like a held breath, pulling the eye toward the deeper corridor of figures and wires, and suggesting the way memory edits a place into essentials. The restrained palette of cool greys and chalky whites, punctuated by a few warm reds, turns everyday movement into a meditation on transience—how the city’s permanence is continually rewritten by passing bodies and shifting weather.







