


This cityscape unfolds as a dense mosaic of stacked dwellings, where ochres and sunbaked browns are repeatedly interrupted by cool, resonant blues, turning architecture into a kind of pulse between heat and shade. The compressed, almost tessellated composition denies open streets and instead privileges rooftops and facades, suggesting a lived intimacy—private lives layered so closely they become one collective surface. Light appears diffused rather than dramatic, softening edges and lending the scene a contemplative stillness, as if the city is remembered rather than merely observed. In the repetition of windows, parapets, and terraces, the painting reads like an urban palimpsest—history, habit, and resilience built one rectangle at a time.







