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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
15.7x15.7in
About this artwork
This piece from my SOIL series is built on deliberate disruption - everything here refuses to behave.
On the left, "I Love You" repeats in laser-etched rows, but red paint bleeds through from behind, interrupting the pattern like wounds or glitches. On the right, geometric marks scatter across the surface - diagrams that lead nowhere, symbols without reference.
The work is penetrated. I used a laser to burn through the canvas entirely in places,… then sealed the holes with lacquer. These aren't decorative punctures - they're breaks in the membrane, points where the surface fails to contain what's underneath.
The title says it: The Wrong Way. The composition fights itself. Text that should communicate becomes obstruction. Structure collapses into fragments. Even the physical integrity of the canvas is compromised.
But that rupture is the point. Sometimes the only honest response is to break the surface, let the errors show, admit that the system isn't holding.
I work at the breaking point where material meets process, where control collides with surrender. My approach shifts with each series. Sometimes I pour fluid acrylic and pigment, pulling it across canvas with rollers until gesso cracks into organic textures. Other times I burn through the surface with lasers, etching text or penetrating the canvas entirely, sealing the wounds with lacquer. Some works layer both. Each series demands its own logic. What connects them: I'm interested in what gets lost when systems try to contain experience. Algorithms log emotions but can't feel them. Geometry structures nature before we notice it. Language repeats until it becomes noise. My paintings make these tensions visible - order collapsing into instability, surfaces breaking to reveal what documentation cannot capture. Trained in philosophy and painting, I approach each work as a visual equation. The result: works that look like nothing else, and ask questions technology can't answer yet.