Artist Statement
Landscape painting, for me, is an act of attention. When I set up my easel outdoors, I'm not just capturing what I see—I'm entering into a conversation with the place itself. The shifting light, the movement of clouds, the particular quality of air at a given moment: these fleeting conditions become the subject of my work.
I work primarily in watercolor and oil, each medium offering its own possibilities. Watercolor's transparency and unpredictability mirror the ephemeral nature of light and atmosphere. Oil paint's richness allows me to build up layers of color and texture that evoke the weight and presence of mountains, forests, and open sky.
My subjects are drawn from the landscapes of the American West, particularly Colorado's Rocky Mountains. These places have taught me to see—to notice how morning light differs from evening, how weather transforms a familiar view, how patience reveals details that hurry obscures.
Each painting is an invitation to pause and look more closely at the natural world. In a time when our attention is constantly pulled in a thousand directions, I hope my work offers a moment of stillness—a quiet space where the beauty of the ordinary can be recognized and appreciated.
I paint not to reproduce nature, but to share the experience of being present within it.