Most people walk past buildings like this without ever looking up. That’s a mistake.
Savannah’s Historic District is one of the most intact collections of 19th-century urban architecture in America, and it rewards the upward glance. Red brick warm in the sun, white shutters thrown open against a sky so blue it almost doesn’t seem real, a curved facade sweeping through the frame with the unhurried confidence of something built to last. A live oak reaches in from the corner, because in Savannah the trees always find a way in.
This image is about the geometry of a city that took its architecture seriously — the cornice details, the proportions of the windows, the way a drainpipe can become a compositional element when the light is right and you’re willing to lie on your back on a sidewalk. Sometimes the best view is the one nobody else is taking.
Available as a matted print, canvas, or metal print.




