
Between Realms
Original Artwork 2025
This piece was inspired by a dream where I was walking through a city made of floating fragments and buildings and rooms suspended in midair all throughout space. It captured that feeling of being in transition, between who you were and who you’re becoming. That in-between space really stayed with me.
The architectural forms in this piece echo my background in architecture, especially the grid lines. They suggest structure and control, but here they’re loosened and drifting, uncertain. The suspended figures mirror that same state, caught in a moment of change, where the past is fading and the future hasn’t fully arrived yet.
Acrylic on Canvas
16inch Round Canvas
Kaleidoscope Series:
This painting is part of the series called Kaleidoscope, and I feel like it really marks a new direction in my creative journey so far as an artist. I usually work in a cubist style, with bold patterns and colour, but with this series, I wanted to take those familiar elements and completely dismantle and reimagine them in new ways—stretching them into cosmic, emotional, and spiritual spaces.
A lot of the imagery in these pieces actually comes from dreams I’ve had in the past, really vivid, symbolic dreams that have stuck with me. They often involved portals, floating figures, shifting architecture, or being watched by something larger than myself. When I learned of the theme of this year's south-versed exhibition I referred back to my dream journal and I started sketching these ideas and realised they were all guiding me into a different way of working which I was really excited about.
For me circular canvas felt essential for this series. The shape is continuous, like a cycle or orbit, to me it holds complexity without needing edges. To me, each painting became a portal, and the title Kaleidoscope captures that sense of constant rearrangement. It’s a metaphor for how identity isn’t fixed. We’re always shifting, piecing together ancestry, memory, ambition, displacement, and spirituality into something that keeps evolving but is still uniquely us.
Overall, Kaleidoscope is about transformation, both personal and artistic. I’ve taken the visual language I’ve developed over time and stretched it into new territory, guided by dreams, memory, and intuition. Each piece is a portal, a layered world, and an invitation for the viewer to step inside and reflect on their own ever-evolving sense of identity and what it means to them.
Between Realms
Original Artwork 2025
This piece was inspired by a dream where I was walking through a city made of floating fragments and buildings and rooms suspended in midair all throughout space. It captured that feeling of being in transition, between who you were and who you’re becoming. That in-between space really stayed with me.
The architectural forms in this piece echo my background in architecture, especially the grid lines. They suggest structure and control, but here they’re loosened and drifting, uncertain. The suspended figures mirror that same state, caught in a moment of change, where the past is fading and the future hasn’t fully arrived yet.
Acrylic on Canvas
16inch Round Canvas
Kaleidoscope Series:
This painting is part of the series called Kaleidoscope, and I feel like it really marks a new direction in my creative journey so far as an artist. I usually work in a cubist style, with bold patterns and colour, but with this series, I wanted to take those familiar elements and completely dismantle and reimagine them in new ways—stretching them into cosmic, emotional, and spiritual spaces.
A lot of the imagery in these pieces actually comes from dreams I’ve had in the past, really vivid, symbolic dreams that have stuck with me. They often involved portals, floating figures, shifting architecture, or being watched by something larger than myself. When I learned of the theme of this year's south-versed exhibition I referred back to my dream journal and I started sketching these ideas and realised they were all guiding me into a different way of working which I was really excited about.
For me circular canvas felt essential for this series. The shape is continuous, like a cycle or orbit, to me it holds complexity without needing edges. To me, each painting became a portal, and the title Kaleidoscope captures that sense of constant rearrangement. It’s a metaphor for how identity isn’t fixed. We’re always shifting, piecing together ancestry, memory, ambition, displacement, and spirituality into something that keeps evolving but is still uniquely us.
Overall, Kaleidoscope is about transformation, both personal and artistic. I’ve taken the visual language I’ve developed over time and stretched it into new territory, guided by dreams, memory, and intuition. Each piece is a portal, a layered world, and an invitation for the viewer to step inside and reflect on their own ever-evolving sense of identity and what it means to them.