Elastic Triangulation 2
• 22” x 30” paper size
• 13” x 21” image size
• Folio White 250 Gram, 100% Cotton, Neutral pH. Water base ink.
• Handprinted silkscreen, 2016
If the first Triangulation broadcast outward, this one turns inward. The composition pulls everything toward a single vertical axis, a spine of stacked nodes and pinch points that the eye travels up and down like a rhythm it cannot stop counting.
The red and black are more unified here, moving in the same direction rather than against each other. The red softens the edges, breathing around the harder black structure like an atmosphere around a core. Together they build a form that is at once skeletal and alive, a column of energy that seems to vibrate at a frequency just below what the eye can fully resolve.
The triangles no longer point outward to dominate the space. They fold into the vertical flow, becoming part of a larger pulse. The composition feels taller than it is, as if it continues beyond the paper in both directions.
Silkscreen printed by hand in water-based ink, the layering of red and black in the dense central nodes creates transparencies that shift with the light. The variation lives there, in those compressed intersections where the two passes of ink meet and create something neither color could achieve alone.
Perfect Imperfections — Limited Edition Series
Perfect Imperfections is a series of geometric digital art designed in vector-based Illustrator software and printed by hand in water-based ink using silkscreen.
It is in the printing that these pieces come alive. The way ink feels to the eye is wholly different from a monitor screen or high-resolution print, and richer still when colors overlap, building texture and unexpected transparencies. The precision of digital shapes becomes something else entirely on paper, and the outcome always carries an element of surprise.
Each piece looks and feels deeply symmetrical, yet every one holds its own variation, a wayward speck of ink, uneven pressure, a blurred line. These are not flaws to be corrected. They are what make each print uniquely human: a quiet secret shared between the work and whoever is looking at it.