



This watercolor study of sunflowers stages a quiet drama of vitality and decline, where one bloom stands open and radiant while the others bow under the weight of ripening time. The composition stacks the heads like a slow sequence of breath—upright, turning, then drooping—held together by dense green leaves that act as a grounding counterpoint to the fragile, flickering petals. Warm ochres and honeyed yellows glow against cool shadowed washes, letting light feel less like illumination than remembrance, as if the paper itself is preserving summer’s last heat. In the soft dissolving background, the flowers become emblems of endurance: beauty not as perfection, but as a graceful surrender to change.







