

A pallid cloud hangs like a sealed thought above a hilltop settlement, releasing a sparse fall of luminous squares that read as data, ash, or blessings—ambiguously tender, quietly ominous. The composition pits the city’s crisp, geometric façades against the surrounding field of restless, hand-carved lines, as if the landscape were a living current pressing in on human order. Muted ochres and slate-greys create a nocturne of restraint, where the few bright flecks become the emotional pulse—suggesting that what sustains a place may also be what erodes its certainty. In this suspended moment, nature and architecture are not opposites but interdependent forces, bound by a fragile weather of memory and change.







