This series is about people's relationship with desire, status and things that often turn out to be superficial. “Paper People” points to both money and fragile identities built around facades, symbols and illusions. The series explores what we chase after, what we sacrifice to possess or appear, and how it can sometimes cost us more than we think.
“PAPER PEOPLE WOULD DIE FOR” is an ongoing series that will grow with new works in the future. Each work is a piece of a larger picture, where contrasts, symbols and colors form a universe that questions what we really value.
KIKI'S FIFTY
BART'S FIFTY
SNOOPY'S HUNDRED
SNOWY'S FIFTY
ELMO'S HUNDRED
PACKAGED DESIRES
The series "PACKAGED DESIRES" takes everyday products and iconic packaging and twists them into images of desire, addiction and illusion. By combining pop culture figures with well-known brands, a language emerges that points to the temptations we encounter everywhere, and how they promise happiness, sweetness and community, but often hide something toxic beneath the surface.
Each work is a reflection on how we consume both goods and emotions. It is about the things we think we need, the things we chase after, and the things we ultimately let define us. The series is ongoing, and will grow with more artworks throughout the year.
PINK LIES
SWEET POISON
MICHELANGELO'S CHOICE
FAST FRAUD
NO WAY OUT
YOU NEVER LEFT, ME VS ME and ALL OVER are a series of works that explore inner struggles and feelings of hopelessness. Through iconic comic expressions and strong contrasts, psychological conflicts are put into visual form.
The images show how one can feel trapped in a recurring pattern – in the confrontation with oneself, in memories that never let go, or in the certainty that everything will eventually fall apart. The series points to what is difficult to put into words, but which can be experienced intensely and brutally in one's inner life.
ALL OVER
ME VS ME
YOU NEVER LEFT
WHEN IT FALLS APART
When It Falls Apart is a series that explores the states we humans can find ourselves in when reality or love falls apart. The works take as their starting point emotions such as derealization, hopelessness and loss, and translate them into visual narratives with references from pop culture, games and iconic symbols.
The series points not only to individual experiences, but to something universal: how we can all lose our footing in the world or in love, and how these moments leave a mark on us.