May 2, 2026
December 28, 2025
September 9, 2025
September 2025 : work in process
This image originated as an in-camera double-exposure, that I immediately cropped, duplicated, horizontally rotated, and then paired flush to the original.
July 5, 2025
May 7, 2025
May 3, 2025
May 4, 2025
God of the Dandelions (April 2025)
A strange realization that this image resembles an interior 'vision' I had days earlier washed over me when I stared at my computer monitor screen, having clicked "save image" hours earlier. I believe I encountered this image in a remarkably specific and visually-particular daydream a few days before I made the in-camera quadruple-exposure that served as the source image of this final version.
March 16, 2025
October 6, 2024
Late September, 2024: Memory over Time, Time over Memory
July 29, 2024
April 21, 2024
New Work (April 2024)
This image began as a triple-exposure, which was then duplicated four times and arranged to complete the final work.
December 25, 2022
Kansas Landscape with Electrical Utility Pole (summer 2022)
A three-exposure panorama. This landscape photo is composed of three individual, (though overlapping) landscape photographs; each of which was made with a full-frame 35mm DSLR and attached 35mm lens. This strange combination of the wooden vertical obelisk and wild vines suggested an element of eros at work (or play?) within the fertile fields of Northeast Kansas.
September 16, 2021
February 23, 2021
Three Different Visual Strategies/Responses to the Same Subject: Orchid
The top image is the most visually conventional, on the surface, yet even it is a couple of steps away from a traditional photograph: looking closely, the viewer detects ghostly double images within the frame.
The second image was made with a pinhole "lens", rather than an actual glass lens. The long exposure time, thirty seconds (due to the tiny f162 aperture through which light strikes the sensor), resulted in a bit of softening of the floral detail.
The third and final image is also a pinhole photograph; it varies from the second image due to a sense of overall Dionysian energy and fecundity, almost from a bug's-eye perspective.





















