Every commercial environment tells people who you are before anyone says a word. This collection represents a range of artistic directions designed specifically for hospitality, corporate, restaurant, retail, and mixed-use environments. Rather than repeating one signature style, I create work that responds to architecture, lighting, clientele, and brand personality. Every project begins with the same question: "What should this room make people feel?"

A monumental composition in layered charcoal and raw umber anchors the arrival sequence, transforming the threshold between exterior and interior into a moment of genuine pause. The scale commands the ceiling height while the texture absorbs and redistributes ambient light, giving the space a warmth no fixture alone could achieve.

Wabi-sabi plaster relief work lines the primary corridor, its deliberate imperfections reading as quiet confidence rather than restraint. Guests slow instinctively. The surface invites touch, creates shadow at every hour, and communicates a curatorial sensibility that elevates the entire property's perceived value before a single room is seen.

Earth-tone abstraction in ochre, raw sienna, and deep charcoal creates a visual backdrop that enhances the dining ritual without competing with it. The composition breathes with the room—active enough to anchor the space, restrained enough to disappear into conversation. Guests photograph it without realizing they are photographing the atmosphere itself.

Gold leaf applied over a matte black ground creates a surface that shifts with every movement in the room—catching candlelight, reflecting the bar's amber glow, and changing character entirely between service hours. The work functions as both art and architecture, defining the lounge's identity without a single word of signage.

Geometric architectural forms in brushed bronze and matte white establish authority the moment a visitor enters. The composition references the company's structural values without illustration—no logos, no literal metaphors. The work communicates precision, permanence, and ambition through form alone, setting the tone for every meeting that follows.

A single monochromatic canvas spanning the primary wall creates a field of focused calm that sharpens rather than distracts. The tonal range—from near-black to warm ivory—mirrors the room's material palette while introducing a depth that no paint color alone could provide. Decision-making spaces require gravity. This work provides it.

A curated sequence of Japandi-influenced works transforms the corridor from a transitional space into a considered journey. Each piece relates to the next through tonal restraint and organic form, creating a rhythm that guides movement without announcing itself. The collection rewards the guest who pauses and punishes no one who does not.

Organic flowing forms in muted editorial tones follow the stairwell's vertical axis, turning a purely functional space into one of the property's most photographed moments. The composition was designed specifically for the diagonal viewing angle of ascent and descent—a detail invisible in documentation but felt immediately in person.

Stone-inspired abstraction in limestone, slate, and warm sand tones establishes the restaurant's identity before the menu is seen. The entry moment is the most underdesigned space in most hospitality projects. Here it becomes the first course—setting expectation, communicating craft, and signaling to guests that every detail ahead has been considered with equal care.

A dimensional wall sculpture in patinated steel and raw concrete bridges the residential and commercial identities of the development, creating a shared visual language for a building that serves multiple audiences. The work is bold enough to anchor a lobby serving hundreds daily while refined enough to satisfy the most discerning residential buyer.

Neutral architectural abstraction in warm ivory, pale bronze, and soft charcoal creates a lobby that feels like the beginning of something private. The scale is residential in spirit despite the commercial footprint—a deliberate choice that communicates exclusivity and signals to residents that their building understands the difference between luxury and ostentation.

Textured plaster work in pale clay, warm white, and soft sage creates a surface that breathes with the space—absorbing sound, diffusing light, and establishing the sensory register of stillness before a single treatment begins. The work was designed to be experienced with eyes half-closed, which is precisely how most guests will encounter it.

Layered acrylic panels in translucent amber, smoke, and warm white create a backdrop that shifts with the retail lighting program—transforming from a quiet presence during daytime browsing to a luminous focal point during evening hours. The work extends the brand's visual identity without replicating it, adding depth that product display alone cannot provide.

Mixed-media installation drawing from Afro-Bohemian luxury traditions—hand-beaten metal, woven textile elements, and layered pigment—creates a members' environment that feels genuinely collected rather than designed. The work communicates cultural intelligence and curatorial confidence, qualities that define the most sought-after private spaces in the world.

Metallic relief work in oxidized copper and warm bronze creates a suite environment where the artwork functions as both focal point and material anchor. The dimensional surface catches light differently from every position in the room—from the entry, from the bed, from the seating area—ensuring the work remains in dialogue with the guest throughout their stay.

Modern abstract expressionism at architectural scale transforms a creative workspace into an environment that actively participates in the culture of the company. The work is energetic without being chaotic, confident without being aggressive—a visual register that communicates to talent, clients, and visitors alike that this is an organization that takes ideas seriously.
I design for the building before I design for the wall. Ceiling heights, lighting, circulation, materials, and viewing distance determine everything.
The artwork should never feel like something that was purchased to fill empty space. It should become part of the architecture itself.
People rarely remember furniture. They remember moments. My work creates visual anchors people associate with the entire experience.
A large editorial mood-board of artistic directions—each unrelated stylistically, each unmistakably sophisticated.
















Every commission begins with understanding the architecture, the audience, and the experience you want people to remember. Whether the project calls for restraint or something impossible to ignore, the goal is always the same: Create an environment people never forget.
Commercial Portfolio