



A riverfront city unfurls in washed, atmospheric layers, where sun-bleached stone steps and softened architecture dissolve into haze, suggesting memory as much as place. The warm vertical pulse of the tower anchors the composition like a devotional metronome, while the water—cool, reflective, and gently agitated—becomes a living threshold between the human crowd and the silent weight of history. Figures are rendered as small, passing notes across the ghats, their movement countered by the enduring geometry of walls and stairways, creating a quiet dialogue between the transient day and the permanence of ritual. In this interplay of light and distance, the scene reads as a meditation on time—how a city holds its people even as it continually lets them go.







