
My work explores the meeting places between land, water, and human activity. Trained as both a landscape artist and an environmental scientist, I paint the edges where ecosystems strain against urban expansion — wetlands pressed against highways, riverbanks shadowed by industry, and horizons fractured by the infrastructures we build to sustain ourselves.
These landscapes are ecological narratives: the quiet resilience of threatened habitats, the beauty that persists in altered environments, and the cultural stories that shape how we inhabit the land.
I work in layered colour fields, atmospheric light, and shifting horizon lines to evoke spaces that feel both familiar and unsettled. Each piece invites viewers to pause inside that tension — to see the land not as backdrop, but as a living presence negotiating its future, landscapes with memory, carrying the stories of the places we often overlook. I may paint the same place numerous times: I think of my subjects as living beings that evolve and grow through the years.
