36×24 inches
Acrylic on canvas
I moved to downtown Raleigh in December 2020 and I’ve been loving it ever since. The fast pace. The energy. The hustle. The people. Downtown pushed me to network different—faster, sharper, and on a higher level. This piece is my ode to Raleigh and the way it’s shaped me. It’s busy. It’s bold. And it made me better.
40×16 inches
Acrylic & molding paste on canvas
(2 Panels)
This two-part abstract piece is a step outside my usual lane. I used molding paste to build texture beneath the black and yellow acrylic lines. It’s more about movement than meaning—just letting the energy lead. Sometimes you have to follow the rhythm and trust where it takes you.
40×16 inches
Acrylic, oil & latex on canvas
This giraffe is part of my paint slinging series—a style that’s all instinct, motion, and momentum. I used acrylic, oil, and latex to build up this wild texture. Every drip and splash is part of the story. Fun fact: Giraffes only sleep about 30 minutes a day. They're always alert, always watching—just like this one, standing tall in a storm of color.
36×24 inches
Acrylic on Canvas
I painted this during the No Inventory Show out in Del Mar. No plan, no supplies—just a flight, four days, and twelve paintings. Coltrane made the cut early. His music is smooth, but it hits hard. It’s spiritual, but sharp. I wanted this to feel like that. He played like he had something bigger than notes to say. And he did. Fun fact: Coltrane’s album A Love Supreme was a prayer—literally. He wrote it as a spiritual offering, and you can feel it in every sound
36×36
Acrylic on canvas
I painted this portrait of Queen Latifah live at a Lenovo event in Morrisville, NC in 2023. She’s always stood for power, presence, and purpose. That regal energy—it’s real. I wanted to honor that. This one’s about what it looks like to walk in your light, fully. Fun fact: Queen Latifah was the first female rapper to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
36×36 inches
Acrylic (black light) on canvas
A glowing owl with a snake in its mouth. Mice crawling around the edges, one bold enough to stand front and center. This piece is a visual riddle—hunter and hunted sharing space on the same canvas. I painted it using black light-reactive paint, so it transforms under the right light. It’s intense. It’s layered. And like most things in life—if you blink, you might miss something.
40×16 inches
Oil on canvas
This piece is about presence. About color. About confidence that doesn’t have to be loud to be powerful. I found a random reference image online and reworked it until it spoke to me. Bold lips, sharp highlights, and a gaze that feels like it’s thinking three moves ahead. To every woman who sees this: You don’t need permission to be vibrant. Or soft. Or loud. Or still. You’re already enough. This painting just wants to remind you of that.
36×24 inches
Acrylic on canvas
I moved to downtown Raleigh in December 2020 and I’ve been loving it ever since. The fast pace. The energy. The hustle. The people. Downtown pushed me to network different—faster, sharper, and on a higher level. This piece is my ode to Raleigh and the way it’s shaped me. It’s busy. It’s bold. And it made me better.
36×36 inches
Acrylic on canvas
This piece is rooted in one truth: love is the answer. Real love—the kind that’s patient, present, and bold—is divine. It doesn’t come with conditions. It doesn’t need a reason. It just is. I believe that love is God, and God is love. And when we really understand that, everything changes. How we show up. How we create. How we see each other. This painting is a reminder to move from that place. Always.
30x40 inches
Acrylic on Canvas
This is a family of lions I painted in 2023. It’s about loyalty, protection, and that unspoken connection between people who share the same blood-or the same spirit. Everybody’s alert, watching eachother’s back. They’re drinking together, side by side, under the same moon. That’s family. That’s bond.
36×24 inches
Acrylic on Canvas
Sinatra stays on my playlist. Always has. It’s the voice, but it’s also the style. He had presence—in the music and outside of it. I painted this during the No Inventory Show in Del Mar. The mugshot caught me. There’s a rebel in that stare. Not aggressive, just… unbothered. I wanted to capture the charm xand the chaos all in one. Fun fact: Sinatra was arrested in 1938 for “seduction” of a woman—which today would be a flex more than a charge.
36×24 inches
Acrylic & paint maker on canvas
One of eight pieces from my hand gesture series. Straightforward. Loud. Alive. This one’s all about energy—and saying a lot without saying a word.
40×30 in
Acrylic on canvas
This piece is a tribute to Kyrie Irving—one of the most fearless and original athletes of our time. I’ve always admired how Kyrie moves. He’s a free thinker. He stands on what he believes in, no matter what the world says. As someone who loves playing basketball, this painting is personal. Kyrie reminds me to stay true to myself, to move with purpose, and to carve out my own lane. That spirit lives in this portrait.
48×36 inches
Acrylic on Canvas
I painted this koi using mostly a palette knife. Layer by layer, stroke by stroke, letting the chaos of color flow like water. Fish, like birds, have always symbolized freedom to me.