



This watercolor seascape dissolves the harbor into veils of mist, where cool blue-lavender washes and warm rusted ochres negotiate the boundary between presence and disappearance. Boats and distant silhouettes are rendered as abbreviated gestures—dark anchors of form that punctuate the luminous breathing space of water and sky—so that reflection becomes as tangible as the vessels themselves. The composition leans on emptiness as its primary architecture, suggesting a quiet narrative of waiting: commerce and travel implied, yet hushed by atmosphere into contemplation. In its soft bleeding edges and restrained contrast, the work speaks of impermanence—how memory, like fog, edits the world into essentials.







