I wanted to share a timely invitation to be together this evening.
Tonight, February 6 5:00–7:00 PM Opening Reception — Time and Transformation Cohen East Gallery · GoggleWorks Center for the Arts
All are welcome to join me tonight for the opening of Time and Transformation, a retrospective spanning more than twenty years of my work—from early abstraction through abstract expressionism and into more recent figurative abstraction.
This body of work reflects a long commitment to painting as a way of listening—to time, to experience, and to something much more powerful than myself. Art has always been my way of communicating with soul energy in a sometimes weary world, and I would love to share that space with you this evening.
Tomorrow, my Winter Art Workshops begin.
The first workshop of the season—focused on gesture drawing—is now closed for registration. I’m especially excited to be teaching this foundational technique, one I first learned as a design student at Parsons in the late 1980s. Gesture has remained a quiet pillar in my creative process ever since.
There is still time to join the next two workshops in the series:
The Language of Color February 28 – 11-1pm We’ll explore how to build your own color story—learning to trust intuition, emotion, and restraint.
From Idea to Artwork March 28th 11 – 3pm My first extended four-hour double session, where I’ll guide participants from concept to completion on a finished canvas. We’ll take a short snack break midway and work together in my studio space with time to slow down and fully engage the process.
One of the most meaningful parts of teaching has been witnessing what happens when people allow themselves to explore their own creative abilities—no matter their background, experience, or self-doubt.
There’s a kind of awakening that takes place in these workshops. A shared energy that fills the room as people connect, experiment, and surprise themselves. In a world that often feels overly material and transactional, creating together offers something quieter and more meaningful—a sense of presence, curiosity, and possibility.
(You’ll see that spirit reflected in the photos from the workshops this past fall.)
LATELY, I’VE BEEN THINKING…
“At the end of every art workshop I lead, there’s a moment when the room shifts—an art studio brimming with possibility, laughter, and wonder as people realize what they’re capable of creating together.”
Until next time,
This Is What Twenty Years Looks Like
02/06/2026, New York City
Hello friends—
I wanted to share a timely invitation to be together this evening.
Tonight, February 6 5:00–7:00 PM Opening Reception — Time and Transformation Cohen East Gallery · GoggleWorks Center for the Arts
All are welcome to join me tonight for the opening of Time and Transformation, a retrospective spanning more than twenty years of my work—from early abstraction through abstract expressionism and into more recent figurative abstraction.
This body of work reflects a long commitment to painting as a way of listening—to time, to experience, and to something much more powerful than myself. Art has always been my way of communicating with soul energy in a sometimes weary world, and I would love to share that space with you this evening.
Tomorrow, my Winter Art Workshops begin.
The first workshop of the season—focused on gesture drawing—is now closed for registration. I’m especially excited to be teaching this foundational technique, one I first learned as a design student at Parsons in the late 1980s. Gesture has remained a quiet pillar in my creative process ever since.
There is still time to join the next two workshops in the series:
The Language of Color February 28 – 11-1pm We’ll explore how to build your own color story—learning to trust intuition, emotion, and restraint.
From Idea to Artwork March 28th 11 – 3pm My first extended four-hour double session, where I’ll guide participants from concept to completion on a finished canvas. We’ll take a short snack break midway and work together in my studio space with time to slow down and fully engage the process.
One of the most meaningful parts of teaching has been witnessing what happens when people allow themselves to explore their own creative abilities—no matter their background, experience, or self-doubt.
There’s a kind of awakening that takes place in these workshops. A shared energy that fills the room as people connect, experiment, and surprise themselves. In a world that often feels overly material and transactional, creating together offers something quieter and more meaningful—a sense of presence, curiosity, and possibility.
(You’ll see that spirit reflected in the photos from the workshops this past fall.)
LATELY, I’VE BEEN THINKING…
“At the end of every art workshop I lead, there’s a moment when the room shifts—an art studio brimming with possibility, laughter, and wonder as people realize what they’re capable of creating together.”