

A cool, saturated field of teal and sea-green becomes both atmosphere and water, suspending a distant settlement of spires and dark, sail-like forms in a state between emergence and dissolution. The composition anchors itself along a low horizon, where fragmented blues, inky blacks, and brief red signals read like memory’s architecture—half-built, half-eroded—reflected in a surface that behaves more like time than liquid. Light is not depicted as a source but as a diffusion, washing the scene into quiet uncertainty and inviting the viewer to navigate by intuition rather than detail. In this ambiguous shoreline, the work suggests a contemplative urbanity—civilization glimpsed through mist—where presence is felt most strongly at the edge of disappearance.







