"Southside": monochromatic gum bichromate print on watercolor paper selected for in an independently-curated student exhibition at BSC.


Untitled scan of a black and white 35mm film image developed using "parodinal," a diy version of a classic developer with tylenol tablets as one of the main ingredients.


"appropriate.jpg": a glitch portrait of my sister using the "sonification" technique where the image is loaded into a music editing program as if it were a sound file and essentially "remixed" to create a wide variety of effects.


"courage.jpg": to this day one of my favorite pieces; mixed media shot on medium format color film, scanned, glitched several different times using techniques such as file destruction and pixel sorting, at which point all of the glitched images were loaded into photoshop to layer them into an image I was fairly happy with; the final image was then run through a composite video simulator to brighten the colors and give it a "glitchier" texture.


"slice.gif": one of my earliest animations, in exchange for shooting her wedding photos for "free," my mother gave me full permission to use them for art purposes given that they fit my concept of family image so neatly; leaning into the creepy side of my work, this image was shot on digital, glitched many times using sonification and/or other forms of file destruction, then loaded into photoshop and animated as a gif. while it isn't my best animation glitch work, I think it showcases well how simple glitch work can become something quite interesting with a little patience (glitching a single high-resolution image can take a while, not to mention the many this required), and a little experimentation in photoshop. Note that on the website the gif runs slower than my downloaded version (at least for me) and the quicker version looks a little better in my opinion.


"barbie.mp4": Glitched video art originally filmed by my father on a VHS-C camera depicting me as a child; glitched by me. While I won't go into the specifics of the irony involved in the "family image" clearly curated in this piece, suffice it to say the video deserved a bit of destruction.


"clean.gif": this small collection wouldn't be complete without a family vacation photo, one of my favorite things to shoot. this one was shot on a disposable camera and glitched mostly using a file destruction technique similar to sonification except with a plain text editor instead of a sound program. after I got a satisfactory result with the base image, I ran it through the composite video simulator several times to get various scanlines reminiscent of an old TV, then animated these images into a gif in photoshop to get the moving scanline effect, mostly for textural purposes. I was a big fan of this animated scanline technique for a good chunk of time. I just really love the colors and shapes on this one, how everyone is so candid, and yet it still manages to read as environmental portraiture-- even in its destroyed state. Again, the gif seems to run much slower on the website for me.