Witnessing
As a Buddhist, a psychotherapist, and an artist, my creative practice is an extension of my clinical and spiritual life. It is rooted in humanistic presence and psychodynamic exploration. These original 14x17 works on archival paper are visual mappings of the mind—not as a static concept, but as a living reality to be observed.
To create is to witness. The pieces in this collection move between two distinct states of mental observation: containment and release. In works like Daily Grind, the repeating grid mirrors the rigid conditioning, repetitive habits, and structural traps of human suffering. In contrast, pieces like Waves, Mirror of Memory, and Winter Frost represent the fluid, ever-changing nature of the unconscious—the rising and falling of thoughts, memory, and breath. The gold and silver lines cutting through the fields of color act as markers of pure, luminous awareness.
By presenting these works unframed and un-matted, they remain completely immediate and vulnerable. There is no glass to separate you from the raw texture of the acrylic or the speed of the stroke. They are invitations to stand in the present moment, to observe the rhythm of the mind, and to simply witness what is.