Artists are witnesses to living history, but unlike journalists, do not stand at its perimeter. Art is not detached documentation, but rather an engagement, a meditation, a questioning, a response, a provocation, a struggle, a vision. The power of the artist and art is imagining and empowering humanity to create possibilities beyond the prisons of present reality.
“Resistance Soup: Postcards to Senators,” Chinatown Soup, 02.03.17. Materials include watercolor and ink on paper.
“Rise and Resist Against White Supremacy and for Racial Justice,” 08.03.17. Materials include pigment markers and tempera paint on poster board.
“Defend DACA,” 08.30.17. Materials include pigment markers and tempera paint on foam board.
“The Art of Protest,” Areté Venue and Gallery, 03.16.18-04.29.18. Materials include tempera paint on paper.
“March for Our Lives,” 03.24.18. Materials include acrylic paint and nylon cable ties on corrugated cardboard.
“March for Our Lives,” 03.24.18. Materials include acrylic paint and nylon cable ties on corrugated cardboard.
“Keep Families Together,” 6.30.18. Materials include acrylic paint on corrugated cardboard.
“Stop The Killings: A Pop-Up Exhibition on Against the Duterte Fascist Regime,” Miranda Kuo Gallery, 07.08.18. Materials include pigment markers and tempera paint on foam board.
“Postcards to Voters,” 07.2018. Materials include watercolor, gouache, and ink on paper.
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