DRAWINGS > Untitled

Untitled - Kentler Demo
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2023
Untitled - Lincoln Center Demo
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2023
Untitled - Firehouse Demo
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2023
Untitled
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2015
UNTITLED
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2019
UNTITLED
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2014
AUNIVERSAL PICTURE 6
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2013
AUNIVERSAL PICTURE 12
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2014
AUNIVERSAL PICTURE 12
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2014
Untitled 15
charcoal on paper
30" x 40"
2012
Untitled 13
charcoal on paper
30" x 40"
2011
Untitled 12
charcoal on paper
64" x 80"
2011
Untitled 12
charcoal on paper
64" x 80"
2011
Untitled 11
charcoal on paper
30" x 40"
2011
Untitled 10
charcoal on paper
64" x 80"
2011
Untitled 10
charcoal on paper
64" x 80"
2011
Untitled 9
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2010
Untitled 8
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2010
Untitled 7
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2010
Untitled 3
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2009
Untitled 2
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2009
Untitled 1
charcoal on paper
20" x 30"
2009

Creative Statement - Untitled / AUNIVERSAL PICTURE

In these large-scale drawings, I am formally exploring the visual tensions between representation and abstraction, as my observed subjects, masses of black plastic trash bags, piles of cockroaches and sculptures of diapers invoke the sensibility of a Rorschach test for viewers to contemplate. On a conceptual level, it cannot be denied that these subjects also have in common connotations of disposability, decay and, most notably, repulsion, especially for me, as they are manifestations of personal fears and anxieties. The drawings themselves are meticulously rendered to convey the opposite, to be objects that are sumptuous and attractive for the audience, and the act of rendering those things in such scale and detail is a form of individual catharsis. The inherent contrasts between light / dark, representation / abstraction, and attraction / repulsion may call into question what we value in art and in a broader cultural context. I believe that my work fits into the ongoing dialogue that elevates the mundane, the ephemeral or the vulgar to a higher status thereby reflecting parts of society that we often refuse to acknowledge in the mirror of traditional norms.

Observational drawing is a very direct way to have this conversation with the viewer with additive and reductive methods of applying charcoal and other abrasive materials on paper and other substrates being the most economical and meditative process for me. The title for most of this body of work, AUNIVERSAL PICTURE, comes from my only slightly tangential interest in horror films, Universal Studios being one of the more prominent institutions that shaped the modern monster media landscape. The figures in my work are an attempt to both create and destroy what is monstrous to me.