

This moody seascape dissolves the harbor into a weathered memory, where charcoal silhouettes of masts and hulls hover at the threshold between presence and erasure. A bruised palette of slate blues and smoky violets is cut by a shard of silvery light that skims the water’s surface, turning reflection into the painting’s true subject—an unstable mirror of industry and longing. The composition’s horizontal sweep feels both hushed and restless, as if fog and tide are steadily rewriting the scene, suggesting the fragility of human structures against time’s slow, elemental drift.







