My design practice grows from my expanding perception that art is creating something, whether it be a digital design or an oil painting or a sculpture that expresses something in, I hope, a universally accessible way. When I was a young BFA student, I thought art began and ended with the pen, the pencil and paint; along the way, computers were invented, and have since become one of the most powerful tools available to artists, whether working in sound, light, motion, or the negative space between objects.

I’m no longer convinced that “Fine Art” is a separate category of skills from “Illustration” or “Graphic Design” and I question the divisions in the art community as a whole that place more value on one type of creation than on another. Truthfully, the same fundamental skills are critical to any artist- the ability to create an object that functions properly doesn’t exclude the possibility of beauty of form.

I aim to create a conversation between fine art and art done for hire- neither is less nor more than the other, and marginalizing one approach doesn’t make another approach better or less- but it does diminish art as a whole to place artificial divisions in paramount positions. I hope to show that each art, each artist, is inherently valuable.

Resume (PDF)

Culturally Specific Art Category

Select Culturally Specific Art Category:: Asian or Asian American, Hispanic or Latino/a/x, American Indian or Alaska Native

Contact information

    Email
/
    Website
/
    Blog
/
    Facebook
/
    Twitter
/
    Instagram
/
    LinkedIn
/