

A rain-soaked city dissolves into smoky washes of grey, where architecture becomes a trembling memory and the street turns into a mirror of passing time. Against this softened tumult, the orange tram arrives like a pulse—an ember of human routine cutting through uncertainty—its reflection stretching into the wet asphalt as if the city were briefly illuminated from within. The loose, bleeding edges of watercolor imply motion and impermanence, while the disciplined perspective of the roadway anchors the viewer in the everyday, suggesting resilience amid urban drift. In this tension between blur and clarity, the work reads as a quiet meditation on modern life: fleeting, crowded, yet insistently alive.







