The Future Looks Like Heaven

The Future Looks Like Heaven Part 1 began as a response to the longing for open spaces during NYC’s lockdown, highlighting nature’s vastness and resilience as essential to grounding and inner freedom. Through rotated landscape photography, the series captures the disorientation of the time, encouraging reflection on our ongoing relationship with nature. The work now examines our ecological responsibility, questioning how art can provoke respect for the planet. It explores sustainable art practices and the importance of meaningful, lasting objects in fostering environmental awareness.

This series of landscape photography on raw linen explores the intersection of traditional and digital mediums. Featuring textured finishes and occasional paint washes, the works evoke a warm, aged aesthetic reminiscent of classical painting. Some pieces incorporate digital manipulation, layers, and fragmentation, while the recurring presence of an owl—whether as observer, foreteller, or inhabitant—invites deeper interpretation. The series culminates in a final image where the owl turns its back, leaving the viewer to reflect. By blending painting techniques with modern processes, this collection offers a fresh perspective in contemporary art.

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I Want to Know Your Ghost