



A narrow urban passage is rendered in watercolor blues that feel both cleansing and claustrophobic, as if the city has been washed down to its memory-stained surfaces. The composition rises in stacked facades and interrupted planes, while the web of overhead wires sketches a nervous geometry that binds the space like an unseen infrastructure of obligation. At ground level, the lone dog becomes the quiet conscience of the scene—small, alert, and enduring—holding the human absence with a tender sobriety as light thins into cool shadow and the street’s warm rust tones suggest lived time beneath the paint.







