



This work reads like an architectural memory dissolved into atmosphere—layers of cool blues and violets stacked in measured bands, where vertical drips interrupt the order like time eroding a once-solid façade. A small aperture of pale gold near the top acts as a withheld sunrise, a quiet insistence of warmth that cannot fully pierce the dominant, oceanic calm. The composition balances restraint and rupture: gridlike rhythms suggest structure and habitation, yet the softened edges and bleeding pigment turn the scene into a meditation on distance, reflection, and the way cities become emotions rather than places. Along the lower edge, a burnished strip of amber glows like sediment or embers, grounding the painting in the afterlight of experience—what remains when clarity fades.







