Overall

Vision Vision

Originality Originality

Technique Technique

Impact Impact

as a whole your artwork is very powerful, visually speaking.composition and use of colors make the scene realistic as they show a believable scene: for example the use of atmospheric scattering that follows the sunlight direction and position together with the bloom of the light gives "depth" to the picture and tells details of the atmosphere, the humidity and the temperature of the place we are seeing, making us "feel" the picture "physically".but the work is also fantastical: with the complicated and huge cathedral (actually basilica) that would be very expensive to make in the real world(inspired by one of the most complex basilica cathedrals in Italy).it's a "realistic fantasy".now on the technique used. I do not dare to know how you work, but you seem to make separate elements from photographs( like towers, houses and so on) and then compose the picture with those, then add "lightning" and atmospheric effects.and if the first impact is great, problem start to arise when seeing the picture in details.for example a lot of elements are repeated in the picture while it's not a huge problem on the man made structures as architecture can be repetitive (except the towers and building on the side of the bridge that are very noticeably the same element) it is noticeable, at least for me, in the gondoliers (even if enough effort was made to not have that effect)one big problem with the technique used is perspective and proportions. for example, if we see the picture the balaustre on the bridge is taller than 2 meters...while arches, doors and cupoles can be "unproportionate" as they could be built with different proportions, windows cannot.in the pictures there are square windows that are as big as a house seen in the at the side of the bridge in the mid-ground...so the composition lacks realistic perspective and appear somewhat "flat" because of that, as depth is given by athmosphere.unfortunately this clash very harshly with the percived realism of the picture (if you prefer, the mimetic quality of the art work).