Fūryū
Beauty does not call out; it simply passes, like a branch that falls. The elegance of cold, of wind, of what fades away without making noise. Fūryū: that which is beautiful because it does not last.
Artistic description:
Fūryū opens up like a landscape of branches and snow, with no clear horizon, where everything is frozen movement. The white and dynamic textures resemble the snow trapped between trunks and rocks, while the background of earthy and cold tones suggests a dense, wintry silence.
The composition merges between the visible and the intuitive, inviting an aesthetic reading characteristic of wabi-sabi: beauty in imperfection, in the spontaneous gesture, and in the matter that seeks nothing. Fūryū is a reverence to nature when it stops wanting to be observed.
Fūryū (風流) is a Japanese aesthetic concept that refers to a refined elegance, often associated with simplicity, nature, and the appreciation of the present moment.