

This watercolor city street unfolds like a remembered morning—forms dissolving at the edges as if the day is still deciding what it will become. A low, warm horizon light filters through dust and foliage, stretching long shadows that pull the eye down the boulevard while the vehicles and pedestrians read as fleeting silhouettes within a larger urban breath. The composition balances bustle with spaciousness: dense, gestural trees frame a luminous corridor of roadway, suggesting that movement is not merely traffic but a collective rhythm of everyday life. In its softened architecture and drifting atmosphere, the work turns the metropolis into a tender, transient experience—where permanence yields to sensation, and the city becomes mood rather than map.







