


A riverfront scene materializes from veils of smoky gray wash, where architecture dissolves into mist and the city feels more like a remembered presence than a fixed place. Against this softened atmosphere, small human figures punctuate the steps in brisk reds and warm tones, turning the ghat into a living pulse that counters the hush of water and fog. The composition leads the eye from the grounded weight of boats and reflections toward a distant spire, suggesting a quiet ascent from the everyday—trade, waiting, passage—into something devotional and timeless. In its restrained palette and selective flare of color, the work speaks of transience: bodies moving through a landscape that endures mostly as mood, light, and ritual.







