001_0A

from $500.00

36”x36” Original is 1800.00 / 25 Limited Numbered Editions are 1200.00 / Colorado Editions are 500.00

“001_0A”

So when you look at this piece, allow yourself to notice what happens in your body. Let the edges and rhythms travel through your nervous system. Let the balance and dissonance play like a score inside you. This is more than vision—it is your brain and body entering resonance. In that resonance lies the possibility of real change, and even healing.

If you are fortunate to have this in your space, when you stand in front of this piece, your brain is not just “seeing.” It is running a vast set of processes across multiple networks. Light strikes your retina, and the information splits into two major visual pathways: the ventral stream, which asks “what is this?”, and the dorsal stream, which asks “where is it and how does it move?” These systems combine, giving you both recognition and a felt sense of spatial orientation.

But perception does not stop at the eyes. Through embodied cognition, your brain simulates movement and sensation as if you were inside the geometry. Angular forms can create tension in the body. Symmetry can bring a sense of balance. Your motor cortex and somatosensory regions are engaged, subtly echoing what you see. This is why art is not just viewed—it is felt.

This is why Pythagoras’s insight still resonates: “Geometry is music we can see.” The harmony in these forms and colors is not an abstract metaphor—it is a physiological event. Just as musical rhythm can entrain the nervous system, geometric proportion can synchronize neural circuits, producing calm, coherence, and repair.

The impact reaches even further. When art holds your attention in this way, it recruits the default mode network—the brain’s system for self-reflection, imagination, and meaning-making. Activity in the default mode network links perception with memory and emotion, allowing you to connect what you see to your own inner life. Neuroscience shows that engaging this network can regulate stress, promote emotional balance, and even support physical healing by reducing cortisol levels and activating restorative parasympathetic states.

I’ve been making art my whole life. And somewhere along the way, I realized—every piece is part of a much larger story.

This work—001_0A—marks the beginning of something new. It comes from my larger Cubist paintings, where entire narratives unfold across the canvas. But here, I’ve taken fragments—shapes that call to me—and shaped them into their own chapters.

Experience a chapter or more....



Type:

36”x36” Original is 1800.00 / 25 Limited Numbered Editions are 1200.00 / Colorado Editions are 500.00

“001_0A”

So when you look at this piece, allow yourself to notice what happens in your body. Let the edges and rhythms travel through your nervous system. Let the balance and dissonance play like a score inside you. This is more than vision—it is your brain and body entering resonance. In that resonance lies the possibility of real change, and even healing.

If you are fortunate to have this in your space, when you stand in front of this piece, your brain is not just “seeing.” It is running a vast set of processes across multiple networks. Light strikes your retina, and the information splits into two major visual pathways: the ventral stream, which asks “what is this?”, and the dorsal stream, which asks “where is it and how does it move?” These systems combine, giving you both recognition and a felt sense of spatial orientation.

But perception does not stop at the eyes. Through embodied cognition, your brain simulates movement and sensation as if you were inside the geometry. Angular forms can create tension in the body. Symmetry can bring a sense of balance. Your motor cortex and somatosensory regions are engaged, subtly echoing what you see. This is why art is not just viewed—it is felt.

This is why Pythagoras’s insight still resonates: “Geometry is music we can see.” The harmony in these forms and colors is not an abstract metaphor—it is a physiological event. Just as musical rhythm can entrain the nervous system, geometric proportion can synchronize neural circuits, producing calm, coherence, and repair.

The impact reaches even further. When art holds your attention in this way, it recruits the default mode network—the brain’s system for self-reflection, imagination, and meaning-making. Activity in the default mode network links perception with memory and emotion, allowing you to connect what you see to your own inner life. Neuroscience shows that engaging this network can regulate stress, promote emotional balance, and even support physical healing by reducing cortisol levels and activating restorative parasympathetic states.

I’ve been making art my whole life. And somewhere along the way, I realized—every piece is part of a much larger story.

This work—001_0A—marks the beginning of something new. It comes from my larger Cubist paintings, where entire narratives unfold across the canvas. But here, I’ve taken fragments—shapes that call to me—and shaped them into their own chapters.

Experience a chapter or more....