

This painting holds a quiet threshold between shelter and wilderness, where the ochre façade glows like stored warmth against a cool, leafy dusk that presses in from the right. Broad, tactile strokes let light behave as a living substance—pooling on the steps, catching on the doorframe, and dissolving into bluish shadow—so the architecture feels less fixed than remembered. The composition stages a gentle dialogue of verticals and diagonals: the upright wall and posts resist the slanting path of illumination, suggesting the daily ritual of return and the fragile boundary of safety. In that tension, the work becomes a meditation on refuge—how a home is not only built from timber and paint, but from the transient, forgiving light that makes it briefly luminous.