About Me
I'm a traditional artist and digital illustrator studying multimedia design. My creative life lives in two worlds: the tactile, where I draw with Micron pens and alcohol markers or paint with acrylics, and the digital, where I build illustrations and design work on screen. I keep them separate on purpose—each medium tells a different kind of truth.
My work circles around memory, objects, and the emotional weight they carry. The smallest things—a worn toy, a chipped mug, a threadbare shirt—can hold whole stories. Art became the language I use to process my own trauma, turning fragments of memory into something tangible, sometimes beautiful, sometimes raw. I want people to see pieces of themselves in those fragments.
I'm currently developing a painting series called The Human Condition, which explores pain, survival, and the messy resilience that shapes us. These paintings use acrylics to tell stories that don’t fit neatly into words—a continuation of my marker and ink work, but heavier, more visceral. They aren’t posted yet, but they’re coming soon.
In the future, I’ll be writing more about my process and the emotional undercurrents behind each series on my blog, where I plan to share sketches, thoughts, and works-in-progress. If my art speaks to you, I hope you’ll follow along as the story unfolds.