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Angel Series

Digital Paintings, 2025.

A continuation of the themes explored in Late Stage Mythology, this work deepens my investigation into how meaning is constructed within the visual noise of contemporary life. Each composition is a maximalist convergence of analog and digital—photographs of my hand-painted and collaged works are reassembled with three-dimensionally rendered elements, forming dense digital tapestries that blur the line between painting, sculpture, and simulation.

Because I was raised within the American Catholic Church, many of my compositions employ Judeo-Christian-influenced archetypes as recurring avatars for spirituality and human longing. These figures appear not as symbols of doctrine, but as echoes of inherited myth—visual remnants through which I explore belief, redemption, and the search for transcendence.

Together, these works reflect the tension between our physical and digital existences, asking how spirituality, identity, and meaning evolve in a crowded, chaotic world where reality and simulation are increasingly intertwined.

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Process

Digital Art philosophy

My approach to digital art is grounded in an analog sensibility. Although I work primarily within digital environments such as Photoshop, I treat each layer, texture, and pixel as though it were a tangible material—responsive, imperfect, and capable of gestural nuance. Through the spontaneous manipulation of layers and assets, I construct compositions and visual languages that could not exist within the constraints of the natural world.

In this process, pixels become the equivalents of pigment and graphite; simulated textures, dithering, and pixelation operate as analogues to traditional mark-making. The aim is not to replicate the surface of painting, but to embrace the digital medium as a site of authentic expression—where intuition, accident, and material exploration converge in a manner parallel to physical studio practice.

- MC