

In this monochrome riverside tableau, the long exposure turns water into a quiet veil while the boats—scarred, wooden, and close enough to feel—become vessels of memory more than transport. The composition hinges on a tactile contrast: the hard, weathered embankment on the right pins the scene in place as the blurred hulls and ghosted figures suggest lives perpetually arriving and departing. Light is restrained and merciful, coaxing grain and patina from the planks, so that time itself reads as the central subject—an economy of motion held inside a profound stillness. What emerges is a meditation on labor and passage, where the river’s calm is not peace but endurance.