A powerful cubist oil-painting-style artwork inspired by Picasso, depicting Lake Peipsi in Estonia and community-led ecological repair. The scene is set in Peipsiland with recognizable elements: broad lake horizon, fishing boats, reeds, wooden shoreline structures, vegetable plots, and traditional village houses. The composition is fragmented into interlocking geometric planes, with strong black outlines and shifting viewpoints typical of cubism.
Foreground: local people restoring the shoreline ecosystem — a group of volunteers (with women prominently visible and active) removing waste from the water edge, planting reeds, rebuilding a spawning stream channel, and placing habitat structures for fish and birds. Show citizen participation and EU-supported restoration indirectly through coordinated tools, organized teamwork, and a sense of shared civic effort (avoid visible text or explicit signage).
Include ecological life returning as symbolic cubist forms: perch and pike in the shallows, a heron, swallows, and wetland plants. Integrate the lake, boats, people, and wildlife into one rhythmic angular composition. The style should feel energetic, modernist, expressive, and slightly monumental — not a literal photo, but a poetic visual narrative of restoration.
Color palette: lake blues, pale sky whites, reed greens, sandy yellows, earthy browns, and selective red accents; thick painterly texture, faceted shapes, and layered planes. A1 exhibition aesthetic, high resolution, no text, no watermark, no flags.