



Suspended in a vast field of cobalt, the city emerges not as architecture but as memoryβdense, eroded forms rising like embers from a nocturnal silence. Charcoal greys and bruised blacks compress the space, while sudden rust-red fissures read as lit windows or interior wounds, giving the skyline a pulse that feels both inhabited and haunted. The painterβs rough, layered surface turns atmosphere into substance, suggesting an urban psyche where permanence is always threatened by dissolution, and light survives only as a stubborn trace.







