Visual Narratives in Art

Visual Narratives in Art: Breaking Boundaries

Visual Narratives in Art: 5 Powerful Emotional Truths

“A work grows as it will and sometimes confronts its author as an independent, even alien creation.” Sigmund Freud

Welcome. I’m grateful you’ve landed here.

This page offers more than just a glimpse into my artwork—it opens a door into how I see, feel, and move through the world. Art has always been a companion for me. A quiet, persistent presence that keeps returning. It’s how I’ve processed grief, expressed wonder, held silence, and shared stories that resist language.

I don’t create to impress. I create to understand. And more often than not, I create to stay connected—to something internal, ancient, and intuitive.

From my earliest days, the pull toward color, texture, and form wasn’t about craft. It was about finding a space where I could bring my whole self—unfiltered. Whether I’m working with molten glass, pigment, or digital tools, I’m constantly moving between tension and release, chaos and clarity. In that space, art becomes more than an outcome. It becomes a conversation.

Sometimes it begins with a single image. A memory, a sensation, a moment I carry like a stone in my pocket. One such moment stays with me still: alone in the Judean Desert, sun melting into the horizon, wind sweeping the dust from an empty trail. It was quiet—but everything inside me felt loud. That moment, without me knowing, set the tone for much of what followed.

In a body of work I call Stripe Paintings, I committed to a limited form—stripes only. Yet within that boundary, each piece became its own narrative. One might hold grief, another uncertainty, another quiet joy. It was both discipline and freedom.

👉 Explore the Stripe Paintings series to discover how visual rhythm and structure carry emotion across the canvas.

I don’t believe art exists just to be looked at. It asks to be met. To be felt. To be questioned. I bring my own story to the process—but what it becomes in your eyes, that’s where the real alchemy begins.

There is storytelling here, too. Not always in the linear sense, but in the emotional arc a piece can hold. If you’re curious about how stories live within images and beyond, I often return to this thoughtful exploration:
👉 The Art of Storytelling

Thank you for spending time in this space. If something here stirs you—stay with it. Follow it. That may be the beginning of your own art.