

This watercolor cityscape settles into a quiet dialogue between built history and living ritual, where the pale façade and brick volumes feel softened by humid air and memory. Broad, economical washes let light breathe through the architecture, while the stepped ghats draw the eye downward to the river’s reflective plane—a second, trembling city made of pigment and silence. Small figures in vivid garments punctuate the muted palette, suggesting devotion and daily endurance, their mirrored colors dissolving into the water like fleeting prayers. The composition holds an elegiac calm, as if time itself is suspended between stone permanence and the river’s patient erasure.







