Finding the Pattern in my Work
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I haven’t updated my website in a while — not because I stopped creating, but because I’ve been deep in it. Painting, experimenting, following instincts, and letting my work evolve without overthinking every step.
Lately, I’ve been stepping back and looking at everything together — the animals, the ocean pieces, the bold silhouettes, the layered pours. I started asking myself what keeps repeating, what feels effortless, and what actually feels most like me.
Here’s what I’ve realized..
I’ve always been the kind of person who sees patterns before I see subjects. Lines, textures, repetition, contrast — those are the things that pull me in and keep me there. My work lives at the intersection of instinct and exploration, where bold silhouettes meet chaotic, color-rich backgrounds and repetition becomes a kind of meditation.
I’m a self-taught artist who grew up doodling oceans, creatures, and anything with movement. Over time, that instinct evolved into a visual language built from saturated pours, graphic outlines, and layered mark-making. Animals, bones, water, feathers, and organic forms often anchor my pieces — not because they’re the point, but because they give structure to the energy underneath.
My art is about surface and feeling as much as subject. It’s about losing time in texture, finding calm in repetition, and letting chaos exist alongside control. Some pieces lean playful and illustrative, others more symbolic and emotional, but all of them come from the same place: curiosity, resilience, and a need to build something honest with my hands.
I don’t create to fit one category. I create to explore — and to invite others into a world where color is loud, lines are intentional, and every piece holds a pulse of the person who made it.