Space and Time
Abstract painting exists in space and time rather than place. It is shaped by memory, emotion, and the fleeting images that surface between waking and sleep. These are moments that resist clarity—felt more than seen, remembered more than understood—where the mind drifts freely and meaning remains open.
Beneath the Surface
For the painter, abstraction is both a home and an unknown terrain. It offers freedom from description and invites instinct to lead. I have been drawn to abstract painting since my earliest experiments, returning to it again and again as an outlet for a wandering mind.
Even when my work moves into other subjects, abstraction remains present—quietly shaping form, color, and movement. It influences how I see the world and how I translate it onto the canvas. In this way, abstraction is not separate from the rest of my work, but woven through it, guiding each painting from beneath the surface.