There is always something special about seeing a piece of artwork leave the studio and find its forever home. Every artist experiences moments of doubt along the creative journey, which makes it even more rewarding to look back at completed work and think, I made that. These past works are a testament to the trust, perseverance, and curiosity that go into every piece.

Art is unlike any other profession. I paint, draw, and create because I feel an undeniable pull towards it—a lifelong passion that continually inspires, challenges, and rewards me. While there is great joy in the process, it is not always easy. There are paintings that seem determined to resist, moments when nothing quite works, and times when the path forward is unclear. But if painting were easy, it would soon become boring. Part of the excitement lies in the challenge itself.

Over the years, I have learnt to trust that process and remain quietly confident that I will eventually figure it out. As Maggi Hambling once said during an interview, that’s not texture it is layers of mistakes! and as Rafi Perez often describes, progress comes through countless micro course corrections along the way. Every mark, layer, decision, revision, and unexpected turn contributes to the final piece, each layer peeking through and giving something to the layer above.

Looking back, I know that some of these works might have been reworked further—or even painted over entirely—had they not found their forever homes when they did. Yet that is part of their story. They stand as records of a moment in time: weird and wonderful experiments born directly from the human mind, driven by emotion, instinct, and a willingness to explore, to experiment without knowing the outcome.

The greatest joy comes when those explorations connect with someone else. It is a reminder that art is ultimately a human conversation—one heart reaching out to another. Knowing that something created from a personal feeling, a fleeting thought, or an intuitive leap can resonate with another person is what makes sharing my work such a privilege, and life’s mission.

*this doesn't list every single sold work.

Sold Artwork*

The Right Side Of Chaos SOLD via North Street Gallery , framed by Hand Bristol on request of customer

Acrylic, house paint, ink on 30 × 42 inch canvas

Divine Rebellion SOLD
Acrylic and coloured pencil

Self reflection
SOLD

Acrylic on 8 × 10 inch canvas

Untitled fire rose puddle SOLD

Home is where the art is SOLD via Vinted
Acrylic on wood cradled panel

The very first : Your Mind is a Maze dude SOLD via BS5 Art trail 2023

VOID at self actualisation SOLD
Acrylic and oil paint

SOLD to collector in USA

Commission door sign

The very first original to be SOLD

untitled patchwork wolf - painted over several over painting attempts

mixed media - oil, acrylic, ink on 30 × 24 inch canvas

Commissioned pet portrait

2 metre x 1 metre acrylic and alcohol inks on canvas commissioned via Upfest for IES engineering

My Flame an not be matched
acrylic on 4 × 4 inch watercolour heavy weight paper

Highly textured acrylic and metallic iridescent gold on 4 × 6 inch canvas

Paint abstract layers over an existing painting so the underlying image shows through the texture. It catches the light more in person.