



This watercolor city tableau stages a meeting of epochs: the locomotive’s iron mass and warm steam push forward like history itself, while the distant cathedral dissolves into a cool blue haze, turning architecture into memory. The composition runs on a strong diagonal—train, platform, and wet reflections—so that motion feels both mechanical and human, echoed by the cyclist and pedestrians who thread through the luminous wash. Light is treated as a moral atmosphere rather than a spotlight, pooling on the rain-slick ground to suggest transit as a state of mind—arrival and departure blurred into one continuous present. In the softened silhouettes and drifting birds, the work proposes modern life as a choreography of small urgencies set against enduring, half-seen monuments.







