A gesture of pouring—both nurturing and performative.
Milk Pour centers on a familiar act—pouring—reframed through the lens of femininity, consumption, and control. Traditionally associated with nourishment and care, the gesture becomes something more ambiguous here: a performance shaped by expectation, visibility, and the act of being observed.
The figure is constructed through layered imagery and fluid mark-making, where areas of the body emerge with clarity while others dissolve into abstraction. The poured element moves across the surface as both material and metaphor—suggesting excess, offering, and the blurring of boundaries between subject and object.
Soft, creamy tones are contrasted with sharper marks and interruptions, creating a tension between sensuality and discomfort. What initially reads as gentle or familiar begins to shift, revealing a more complex dynamic beneath.
As part of an ongoing exploration of femininity and representation, Milk Pour reflects on how the female body is positioned within cycles of giving, consumption, and display—and what it means to interrupt or reclaim that narrative.
Archival giclée print
Printed on museum-quality fine art paper
Multiple sizes available
Unframed
Signed
Small: 9 × 12 in with a 1 inch border
Medium: 12 × 16 in with a 1 inch border
Large: 30 × 40 in with a 2 inch border
Extra Large: 36 × 48 in with a 2 inch border
A gesture of pouring—both nurturing and performative.
Milk Pour centers on a familiar act—pouring—reframed through the lens of femininity, consumption, and control. Traditionally associated with nourishment and care, the gesture becomes something more ambiguous here: a performance shaped by expectation, visibility, and the act of being observed.
The figure is constructed through layered imagery and fluid mark-making, where areas of the body emerge with clarity while others dissolve into abstraction. The poured element moves across the surface as both material and metaphor—suggesting excess, offering, and the blurring of boundaries between subject and object.
Soft, creamy tones are contrasted with sharper marks and interruptions, creating a tension between sensuality and discomfort. What initially reads as gentle or familiar begins to shift, revealing a more complex dynamic beneath.
As part of an ongoing exploration of femininity and representation, Milk Pour reflects on how the female body is positioned within cycles of giving, consumption, and display—and what it means to interrupt or reclaim that narrative.
Archival giclée print
Printed on museum-quality fine art paper
Multiple sizes available
Unframed
Signed
Small: 9 × 12 in with a 1 inch border
Medium: 12 × 16 in with a 1 inch border
Large: 30 × 40 in with a 2 inch border
Extra Large: 36 × 48 in with a 2 inch border