



This work reads like a shoreline remembered rather than recorded, its strata of cobalt, teal, and sand-toned light stacking into a slow horizon where time feels sedimented. Raised, vein-like lines drift across the surface like tidal wrack or cartographic traces, turning the picture plane into a tactile geography that invites both touch and contemplation. The interplay of glossy ridges and scumbled matte passages lets light βmoveβ across the piece, suggesting a sea that is simultaneously calm and unsettledβan elegy for natureβs persistence under pressure. In its layered compression of water, sky, and earth, the painting becomes a meditation on passage: erosion as quiet endurance, and memory as an ever-changing coast.







