This self-portrait was done using a mirror. Looking at myself for a prolonged period of time made me focus on the facial features I hated most. However, I began to see how these features made the person I am as I continued drawing.
This photograph captures the Oregon tide pools in an almost alien light. It shows a mist-laden seascape where land and water blur into something dreamlike. Figures dot the rugged shoreline, their forms softened by the haze, as if caught between…
In response, I shot these photos on Samsung SCH-S380C, a thirteen year old low-end cell phone. This type of technology is plentiful (most people have something similar lying around), and often ends up as e-waste, as obsolescence has made them…
“Venus” references the Venus Pudica pose from classical and baroque art, historically used to convey modesty and desire while highlighting the female form. I have adapted this pose to examine top surgery scars, presenting the trans body in a positive…
Vertex was created using Silverpoint, a Renaissance-era technique in which artists like da Vinci or Dürer would use metal to draw. The surface has been treated with a "ground" that contains both an orange pigment and bone-ash, which serves to create…
Either out of pure necessity or pure excitement did this person decide to take a walk in a blizzard. There was so much snow in the air that you could see only a city block and then just white. It was the total opposite of dusk on a typical day where…
I find nature and animals to be amazing and inspiring and drew this bat in a single color to highlight the incredible details and texture of its fur and wings.
I made this WALL-E model in my CAD class during my senior year of high school. That class contributed greatly to my decision to major in Industrial Design (ID) in college as ID is a field which heavily relies on 3D modeling. This WALL-E represents…
Intensity often triggers overwhelm. There are images which feel immediate and present, others reflect the past, and others give a glimpse into a future. Searching for our own meaning in imagery can leave one frustrated, or relieved. What do we tally?…
this vertical composition captures the Pacific Coast in a moment of quiet power. The land rises and falls in layered ridges, pulling the eye from the textured foreground up through misty cliffs and into a pale, expansive sky.