A figure in the process of becoming—unraveling what was once held together.
Undone captures a moment of quiet disassembly—where the figure begins to slip beyond the boundaries that once defined her. What appears composed at first glance gradually gives way to fragmentation, revealing the tension between control and release.
Through layered imagery, gestural marks, and areas of erasure, the body is both constructed and disrupted. Edges soften, forms dissolve, and the surface holds traces of what has been altered or removed. This process mirrors the act of undoing—not as loss, but as transformation.
The work explores the vulnerability of being seen in transition, when identity is no longer fixed but actively shifting. There is a subtle resistance within the figure—a refusal to remain fully intact under the weight of expectation.
As part of an ongoing exploration of femininity and representation, Undone reflects on what it means to loosen the structures that shape the female image—and to exist, even briefly, outside of them.
Archival giclée print
Printed on museum-quality fine art paper
Multiple sizes available
Unframed
Signed
Small: 8 × 8 in with a 1 inch border
Medium: 12 × 12 in with a 1 inch border
Large: 20 × 20 in with a 2 inch border
Extra Large: 36 × 36 in with a 2 inch border
A figure in the process of becoming—unraveling what was once held together.
Undone captures a moment of quiet disassembly—where the figure begins to slip beyond the boundaries that once defined her. What appears composed at first glance gradually gives way to fragmentation, revealing the tension between control and release.
Through layered imagery, gestural marks, and areas of erasure, the body is both constructed and disrupted. Edges soften, forms dissolve, and the surface holds traces of what has been altered or removed. This process mirrors the act of undoing—not as loss, but as transformation.
The work explores the vulnerability of being seen in transition, when identity is no longer fixed but actively shifting. There is a subtle resistance within the figure—a refusal to remain fully intact under the weight of expectation.
As part of an ongoing exploration of femininity and representation, Undone reflects on what it means to loosen the structures that shape the female image—and to exist, even briefly, outside of them.
Archival giclée print
Printed on museum-quality fine art paper
Multiple sizes available
Unframed
Signed
Small: 8 × 8 in with a 1 inch border
Medium: 12 × 12 in with a 1 inch border
Large: 20 × 20 in with a 2 inch border
Extra Large: 36 × 36 in with a 2 inch border