
Gutted portraits
Summer 2024 - Present
In the summer of 2019, while working at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, I had the chance to see Hyman Bloom: Matters of Life and Death, just before starting an intensive graduate painting course. Bloom’s work left a profound impression on me—his visceral depictions of cadavers, butchered animals, and fish bodied “seascapes” blurred the boundaries between life and decay, presence and absence. That impact is evident in my series, Gutted Portraits, where I invite the viewer to confront the disomfort of looking—examing mortality, the fragility of flesh, and the unexpected beauty that can exist within decay. Through these works, I challenge the idea that death is purely absence, asking instead whether stillness itself can hold a kind of presence.
Anatomy of Stillness 12x12 Acrylic on canvas
Anatomy of Stillness Study 5x7 Mixed Media on paper
Anatomy of Stillness Graphite Study 5x7 Graphite on paper
Flesh Fosils 9x12 Oil on canvas paper
Untitled 8x10 Acryclic on canvas
Bottom of the Barrel Graphite Study
Sardines 12x12 Acrylic on canvas
Three Fish Study 5x7 Mixed Media on paper