

Rendered in a restrained monochrome wash, the city becomes a theatre of softened edges where rain dissolves certainty and turns architecture into memory. The composition is pulled forward by converging street lines and the quiet procession of a horse-drawn carriage, a deliberate anachronism that tethers modern traffic to older rhythms of passage. A single electric blue reflection punctures the gray atmosphere like a pulse—less a detail than a whispered insistence on presence—while lamplight and window-glow stitch human scale back into the monumental facades. In this damp, reflective space, motion feels hushed and introspective, as though the metropolis is briefly listening to itself.







