Flowers in the City explores the fragile and often unnoticed coexistence of urban space and natural life. The series developed through direct observation of flowering trees, leaves, gardens, courtyards, parks, and spontaneous moments of seasonal transformation within the city environment. Rather than depicting flowers as decorative subjects, the works focus on atmosphere, light, rhythm, and emotional presence. Urban surroundings remain visible sometimes directly, sometimes only as a quiet structure behind branches, petals, and color.
The project began in 2020, when pandemic restrictions narrowed everyday movement and intensified attention to nearby natural details.
During the war, the series acquired new meaning: flowers, trees, and seasonal rhythms became rare spaces of quietness and emotional continuity within an increasingly unstable reality.
The project reflects an ongoing interest in attentive perception and the experience of rediscovering familiar spaces through seasonal change. In the context of everyday urban life, flowering becomes a moment of pause, renewal, and visual concentration.
Through watercolor, monotype, drawing and sketching the series explores transparency, movement, and the instability of fleeting impressions.









Absorb voices and colors” (diptych)

Absorb voices and colors” (diptych)

Observational Practice
Most works in the series originate from direct visual observation and develop through plein-air studies, memory, and studio reflection.
