2011
In 2011, a fire destroyed a studio in Chicago's Uptown neighborhood. A stack of old charcoal drawings on newsprint survived. They became the seed for this body of work.
2023
These artworks simulate complex adaptive systems. Two human silhouettes move and collide on the surface of a canvas-like, self-contained object, powered by an integrated computer running custom software.
The figures play out distinct stories through the nearly infinite scenarios that unfold. Once started, the movements are impossible to predict and very unlikely to repeat.
2022
The paintings in this cycle are based on events and ideas that leave significant marks on our collective and individual bodies. They are rendered using sgraffito, in acrylics on canvas.
2020
A long running inquiry into the Abstract Expressionist messaging about the sublime. Based mostly on the writings of Robert Motherwell and Barnett Newman, these pieces can be seen as conversations between me and idealized versions of the American artists of the fifties.
My work is about the individual, the collective, and the point at which a person transforms into a "type." It engages with the possibility of an "other" maintaining their individuality while still being part of a group. The dissolution and emergence of interpersonal boundaries form the core of my multidisciplinary approach.
In my software-based installations, I program unique nondeterministic algorithms to simulate physical interactions between silhouettes that move in a gravity-free environment. Human bodies appear to float on surfaces of fabric or paper, contained within a canvas-like object on the wall.
I collaborate with artist communities in Europe and the US. These connections provide me with unfamiliar perspectives and common causes. As an artist, a techie, an immigrant and an expat, I aim to reveal the nuances that lie beneath the surface of our quantified lives.