Working on large, concept-driven exhibitions like 12:06 AM and R Age is an act of total immersion. The mind sinks deep into a single idea, searching through vast fields of imagery, memory, and metaphor. But in that searching, something unexpected always happens: peripheral visions appear.
Images, fragments, and half-formed directions rise at the edges, too alive to ignore, too unruly to fit neatly into the central work. These are often the most intriguing beginnings.
This page gathers those offshoots, projects still taking shape, experiments that hover between sketch and statement. They are living questions, glimpses into the future of the work.
Human Cartography
An exploration of how a life inscribes itself upon the body.
Every scar, wrinkle, and crease becomes a marker—evidence of experiences lived and time endured. In this project, the human form is reimagined as a map: a geography of memory and mortality. Resin skulls and painted surfaces carry both the natural fissures of bone and the deliberate language of vintage cartography—compass roses, faded borders, the warning: here be dragons.
These works are less anatomy than topography, recording not only where a body has been, but the uncharted territories it still suggests.