

This watercolor city-corner distills everyday architecture into a fragile geometry of slanted roofs, railings, and utility lines, where light seems to wash the walls clean while leaving time’s stains intact. The cool blues and weathered neutrals hold a quiet tension against the warm accents at street level, guiding the eye toward two small figures who lend scale—and a hint of narrative—to the otherwise impersonal façade. Space is organized through layered planes and soft-edged shadows, suggesting a neighborhood suspended between maintenance and decay, between lived intimacy and urban anonymity. In its restrained atmosphere, the work becomes a meditation on ordinary survival: a place where structures endure, and life passes through like a brief, luminous interruption.







