I’m Free

I am Free: 13 x 18 in, graphite and charcoal

Throughout history portraiture has been used as a record of a person displaying the qualities of beauty, wealth, or personality of the sitter. As an artist, portraiture is my tool to transcend the individual identity and to reach into the realm of psychological characteristics. It’s a portrait of recognizable traits above recognizable individuals, relatable and customized to the interpretation of the viewers. In I’m Boundless, those traits are that of confidence and unlimited possibilities. The timeless woman, with focus and certainty, radiating an aura of grace and beauty, displays her power of control.

Hypatia

Hypatia (c.370-415 AD) was a great female scholar known as the first woman mathematician, an astronomer, and a philosopher. In a world dominated by men, she was a free thinker dedicated to the pursuit of wisdom in a pivotal moment in time of the great city of Alexandria. Her life came to an end when she was brutally murdered by a group of zealous monks that saw her standing in society as a threat. Her dismembered body were scattered around the city and burned.

Inspired by her strength, wisdom, and dedication to knowledge and science, I wanted to depict a portrait of Hypatia as a proud heroine, a vivid portrait of an exceptional woman with a tragic hint in her face as she sternly glazes beyond the norm of her time. Behind her, an astrolabe credited as her invention, symbolizes the age of science and discovery. She is ancient and modern, holding archetypal value that survives in the contemporary age, and a bearer of universal human values, of education and science, and of the global struggle of women’s equality.

Hypatia, 20 x 13 in, graphite and charcoal.
Hypatia, 20 x 13 in, graphite and charcoal.

The Edge of Humanity

The Edge of Humanity:

An artificial intelligence conquest must encompass the integration of total knowledge through interfacing with the emotional soul, which unfolds according to a systematic neural invasion. Through the unnatural navigation of the human mind, it will unavoidably fail, lacking the tears and deep connection to the natural world that only can arise organically from the fine tuning of countless human events and possibilities.

The Edge of Humanity: “13” x 19″, graphite and charcoal on paper
The Edge of Humanity: “13” x 19″, graphite and charcoal on paper

EdgeWIP