#43: When the Studio Feels Like a Laboratory

#43: When the Studio Feels Like a Laboratory

Lately my studio looks less like a studio and more like a laboratory — Perspex sheets, varnish tests, and failed scraps scattered everywhere. In this post, I reflect on the role of experimentation in my moiré portrait project, and why research and failure are as essential as paint.

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#42: The Invisible Layers of a Painting

#42: The Invisible Layers of a Painting

Every painting carries layers the audience never sees — tests, failures, underpaintings, and hours of trial and error. In this post, I reflect on the hidden groundwork behind my current moiré project, and why those invisible stages matter as much as the finished surface.

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#41: Trusting the Experiments

#41: Trusting the Experiments

Before a painting exists, there’s a lot of invisible work — the quiet stage of testing and failing. In this post, I share how I’m using a sacrificial Perspex sheet to experiment with paints and varnishes for my moiré project, and why these unseen steps are vital to inventing a new process.

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#40: When Play Becomes Purpose

#40: When Play Becomes Purpose

My moiré portrait project started as pure experimentation — no pressure, no plan, just play. But somewhere along the way, it became something more. In this post, I reflect on how creativity often finds its purpose after you’ve already started, and why that’s exactly the kind of surprise I love.

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