The painting depicts a vibrant river landscape captured in bold, dynamic lines and luminous colour accents. The river runs diagonally through the composition, opening up a view into the depth of the pictorial space. Its surface is rendered in shades of blue and turquoise, interlaced with dark ink strokes that suggest movement and current. On the left and right, dense, lush greenery frames the water. The trees and bushes are drawn with expressive contours and swift, gestural lines, creating an almost vibrating energy. Yellowish and light-green accents set points of light, while the sky is only lightly indicated and kept in soft whites and blues. Overall, the composition appears dynamic, richly coloured, and at the same time harmonious.
The work was created during a period in which gestural linework, expressive colour, and a reduced formal language were widespread in art. Evard’s lively ink strokes and the emphasis on the emotional impact of colour and movement reflect this artistic spirit of the time. Like many artists of the 1960s, he does not depict the landscape naturalistically, but uses it as an expression of inner sensations and as a space for free, seemingly spontaneous formal creation.