

This watercolor seascape settles into a hush of tide and weather, where diluted blues and sand-washed ochres dissolve the boundary between land, water, and air. Two anchored boats—small, vivid interruptions of red and blue—become quiet protagonists, their stillness measuring the vast, breathing expanse around them. The distant headland, softened into misty greens, suggests memory more than geography, turning the shoreline into a contemplative threshold between departure and return. In the generous negative space and fluid bleed of pigment, the work speaks of transience: the sea’s constant erasure, and the fragile human mark that persists anyway.







