

A brooding, tidal mass of deep blues and soot-dark greens surges through the center, as if the landscape’s memory has condensed into one weighty, moving shadow. Around it, veils of pale light and sandy washes open breathing space, letting small eruptions of ochre and lime read like fleeting signals—sunlight catching on earth, or hope breaking through sediment. The composition holds a poised tension between dissolution and structure: edges blur into atmosphere, yet the horizon and distant silhouettes persist, suggesting endurance amid continual change. What emerges is a meditation on transition—nature not as scenery, but as an interior weather system where clarity arrives only in brief, luminous intervals.