



This work distills a waterfront into a quiet geometry of bands and planes, where the layered horizontals read like measured breaths and the still surface becomes a mirror of restraint rather than spectacle. Muted blues and sanded ochres temper the scene with a contemplative coolness, while the squat pier forms anchor the composition—solid interruptions against the fluid, silvery expanse. The delicate reflections and sparse marks suggest presence without narrative certainty, as if the place is remembered more through atmosphere than event. In its economy of detail, the painting meditates on thresholds—between land and water, structure and drift, the human-built and the slowly eroding calm.







