



This watercolor city square dissolves into atmosphere, where wet stone and washed sky mirror one another and turn architecture into a quiet, luminous memory. The central façade anchors the composition like a civic altar, while the softened silhouettes of passersby—elongated by reflection—suggest lives in transit rather than fixed identities. Warm ochres and cool blues negotiate between shelter and openness, giving the scene a tender tension: permanence in the buildings, impermanence in the human traces. Light appears less as illumination than as a misty veil, implying that the true subject is time itself—how a place endures while moments slip fluidly across its surface.







