top of page

"The language of the soul"

This work is born from vulnerability. Raw, unfiltered, and unapologetically human.  Where media often distorts tragedy into political currency, this art pushes back, restoring weight, truth, and humanity to the narrative.

​

A portion of every piece sold is redirected to support the very struggles it reflects. This is the line between activism and exploitation, between profiting from pain and giving something of yourself to ease it.

Closer to home, every sale fuels another mission: putting art supplies into the hands of kids who would otherwise go without. Because creativity shouldn't be a luxury, it’s an outlet, a lifeline, a voice waiting to be discovered.

Holy War.jpg

"Holy War"

 30x40"

There is a quieter war being fought, not marked by gunfire, but by influence. A war waged through the erosion of truth, where history has been re-written, narratives are curated, and reality is filtered until it no longer resembles itself. A war that targets the foundation of morality, subtly, systematically. 

Pornography, onlyfans, pedophilia, genocide. The culture they normalize, and the values we slowly abandon.

The emasculation of men and the perversion of women in the name of "feminism."  What’s marketed as empowerment blur into exploitation, control and the destruction of the Christian family, disguised in language that shields it and "them" from scrutiny.

And beneath it all is a growing tension: a sense that something foundational is being challenged. Faith. Ethics. The very idea of right and wrong. The most effective battles are the ones people don’t realize they’re in.

We must wage the crusade against this satanic cabal.

​

"Rooftops"

22x28"

​

This painting captures the tension between external turmoil and internal refuge. It speaks to the power of retreating into thought, imagination, and knowledge when reality feels overwhelming. Even as everything around him appears to be unraveling, the act of reading becomes an anchor—an escape, but also a form of resistance.

It’s a visual reminder that while the world may feel like it’s on fire, there are still places we can go; within ourselves, where clarity, peace, and meaning endure.

WorldIsBurning.jpg
Lone Rider.jpg

"Lone Outlaw"

30x40"

This captures the moment a man breaks from the noise, the crowd, and the code that once defined him.

A black horse rears beneath a storm-heavy sky, powerful, untamed, almost biblical in presence. It’s not just an animal, but a symbol: judgment, strength, and the burden of truth. The rider leans back, arm raised, firing into the darkness, not in celebration, but in defiance. A final shot into the past.

Behind him, the saloon glows warm with false comfort. All the promising vices, booze, women and debauchery.  But he doesn’t enter. He doesn’t even look back.

This is a painting about separation, the kind that costs you everything familiar. Walking away from betrayal. From indulgence. From the version of yourself that was slowly being consumed by it all. The chaos in the sky mirrors the war within, but the direction is clear: forward, alone, and unafraid.

“Lone Outlaw” isn’t about rebellion for the sake of rebellion. It’s about reclaiming your soul when the world you stood in no longer deserves it.

"Frankie"

22x28"

​Frank Sinatra helped define “classic masculinity” in the mid-20th century by blending confidence, style, emotional restraint, and vulnerability into a single persona.

He embodied a kind of polished, self-assured individualism—someone who could command a room but also navigate vulnerability with dignity.

Sinatra’s influence carried into broader cultural ideals, shaping how masculinity was portrayed in music, film, and media: confident but not loud, refined but not rigid, and strong enough to be open without losing composure. Forever will be one of my all time favorites. 

Frankie.jpg
Crusader.jpg

"Silent Sentinel"

12x16"

​

This painting is a somber and powerful call to action, utilizing dramatic chiaroscuro to highlight the plight of persecuted Christians in Syria and Nigeria.

The central imagery of the Great Helm and the blood-stained cross on the blade serves as a dual tribute: it honors the sacrifice of those silenced by violence while standing as a visual mandate for "strong men" to find their resolve. By emerging from a deep, atmospheric void, the piece reminds the viewer that true strength is defined by the courage to protect the vulnerable and stand as a shield against the darkness of indifference.

"Starving Child in Gaza"

This painting serves as a raw and haunting plea for humanity, focusing on the devastating reality of famine and genocide in Gaza.

By capturing the desperate expression of a child clutching an empty pot, the artwork strips away political complexity to reveal the unfiltered suffering of the most vulnerable. The dark, cramped composition creates a sense of entrapment, while the child’s upturned face and open mouth act as a literal "voice for the voiceless"—a visceral demand for the world to witness and respond to the man-made catastrophe of starvation. It is a work of artistic advocacy, designed to bridge the gap between distant headlines and the agonizing human cost of conflict.

12x16"

IMG_4662.jpg

Subscribe Form

Thanks for submitting!

  • Instagram
  • YouTube
bottom of page