

This watercolor landscape stages a quiet dialogue between solidity and flow: a low stone bridge, punctured by three circular apertures, becomes both barrier and invitation as it lets the river breathe through measured intervals. Muted umbers and mossy greens dissolve at the edges into atmospheric washes, while the mirrorlike surface below gathers sky, shoreline, and the bridge’s geometry into a second, softer world. The composition lingers on thresholds—land to water, structure to reflection—suggesting memory’s way of holding a place: not as fixed architecture, but as a gentle seepage of light, time, and passing air.







