My abstract work is a confrontation, a visual reckoning with the fractures that define our modern society. I create in response to the persistent anger that permeates our world, a rage that has become both symptom and shield in a culture increasingly driven by division. Through my art, I explore the breakdown of human connection: the failed interactions between races and ethnic groups, the emotional volatility that replaces dialogue, and the societal impulse to express pain through aggression rather than empathy.
I work with materials that resist harmony. I combine textures, surfaces, and forms that challenge one another, each piece a metaphor for the tension we live with. These materials are manipulated to their limits, stretched, torn, layered, and reassembled to reflect the emotional dissonance of our time. The process is physical, intuitive, and often uncomfortable. It mirrors the chaos of a world where the need to be “right” has eclipsed the need to be kind, where ideological dominance has blurred the lines between conviction and cruelty.
My work does not offer resolution. It is not a balm, it is a rupture. It asks viewers to sit with discomfort, to witness the emotional violence that masquerades as righteousness, and to question the societal norms that reward dominance over understanding. I believe aggression is not innate, it is cultivated in environments starved of compassion. The erosion of basic manners, the abandonment of cooperation, and the dismissal of love as weakness have created a culture that is increasingly disconnected from its own humanity.
Each work is a lament and a provocation. It mourns the loss of empathy, but it also demands accountability. I want my work to unsettle, to provoke reflection, and to challenge viewers to reconsider their role in the emotional architecture of society. Ultimately, my art is a call to remember what we are capable of when we choose vulnerability over control, connection over conflict, and compassion over conquest.
This is not a quiet plea, it is a scream rendered in pigment, texture, and form. And it will not be silenced.