



A hushed landscape unfurls beneath a sky washed in apricot light, where the warmth of dawn or dusk presses softly against the cool, misted blues of distant hills. The composition is held in a delicate tension between openness and intrusion: wide horizontal bands of field and fog are scored by power lines that stitch the scene into the everyday, turning the sublime into something inhabited and contingent. Ink-like thickets and bleeding watercolor edges suggest memory more than reportage, as if the land is dissolving back into atmosphere even while human infrastructure insists on its geometry. In this quiet collision, the work speaks of modern presence as a faint, persistent hum within natureβs vast, breathing silence.







