Artist Statement
As an artist, I try to create fun, expressive work about the parts of the world that are important to me like wildlife, nature, and the outdoors. I think that art should be fun, and I like to experiment with colors, texture, and medium.
I always come back to my love of animals and the outdoors. I love being outside and often prefer animals over humans, so I want my work to share with others how being outside makes me feel. I believe that the world would be a better place if people spent more time outside, in the fresh air, around trees and watching squirrels. This has been a part of my art inspiration since I started pulling photos out of wildlife books as a middle schooler. And it's not just big, wild animals from other regions and continents that are important enough to be featured in art. Everyone from the squirrels and dogs at the park to the elephants and rhinos at the zoo are exciting and interesting. Outdoor spaces and their residents are some of the few parts of everyday life that can’t be controlled or forced to follow rules. Birds fly where they want to fly, Squirrels scamper around and steal food. Trees grow in quirky, irregular ways. They don’t care about ownership or money, and they can’t easily be priced or controlled. Anyone can walk into a park and be a part of nature. It’s safe and filled with creatures that don’t care who you are or why you are there. They just keep living, and I consider that to be special and a good reminder for my own life.
I try to use bright colors and loose marks to show the fun, unpredictable version of the world I see and how excited it makes me. Being in nature makes me feel good and optimistic so I want my work to give others a similar feeling. I hope to create art that celebrates this part of the world that is so easy to treat as invisible or replaceable. I like to use a lot of texture in my work because it shows how interesting and complex those places are. I also work in a variety of mediums including chalk, gouache, marker, different printmaking mediums, and digital programs.
Overall, my work focuses on my love of the outdoors and its inhabitants. I believe that outdoor spaces are unvalued and too easily forgotten about. The outdoors are my safe space, and I hope to share it with others through bright colors and lots of lines and texture.
My art focuses on my love of nature and wildlife. My goal is to show the beauty and value I see in nature and animals in quick snapshots. I use bright but still realistic colors to communicate the excitement I feel when I am outside while still keeping the images clear and recognizable.
This piece shows my dog Astro chasing a squirrel up a tree and reaching for the squirrel hopelessly as it sits out of reach. It uses the 3D aspect of glazed and painted clay to continue experimenting with different approaches to pet portraits and reflects my experiences of spending time with my dog and my feelings of homesickness as I left home for the first time and was separated from her. The distance between the edge of her paw and the brightly colored squirrel shows the feeling of disappointment when you realize that something exciting and important to you is within sight but still just out of your reach.