Maybe you could do it?! (2024 Spring Sessions, #1/9)
Original artwork, 22” x 30” mixed media on paper, unframed
The title comes from a moment of spontaneous possibility, a question that emerged on a drive to the SFMOMA as we discussed our separate artistic pursuits. In that instant, the challenge was born: to merge two creative worlds in real time. The phrase itself carries many interpretations—part suggestion, part invitation, part challenge—like the piece itself, which is both an expression of curiosity and an exploration of new territory. As the piece unfolds, it becomes a conversation between two voices, one reflective, the other forward-looking, each carrying its own version of “could”—the possibility of something unexpected, shared, and ultimately realized.
Original artwork, 22” x 30” mixed media on paper, unframed
The title comes from a moment of spontaneous possibility, a question that emerged on a drive to the SFMOMA as we discussed our separate artistic pursuits. In that instant, the challenge was born: to merge two creative worlds in real time. The phrase itself carries many interpretations—part suggestion, part invitation, part challenge—like the piece itself, which is both an expression of curiosity and an exploration of new territory. As the piece unfolds, it becomes a conversation between two voices, one reflective, the other forward-looking, each carrying its own version of “could”—the possibility of something unexpected, shared, and ultimately realized.
Original artwork, 22” x 30” mixed media on paper, unframed
The title comes from a moment of spontaneous possibility, a question that emerged on a drive to the SFMOMA as we discussed our separate artistic pursuits. In that instant, the challenge was born: to merge two creative worlds in real time. The phrase itself carries many interpretations—part suggestion, part invitation, part challenge—like the piece itself, which is both an expression of curiosity and an exploration of new territory. As the piece unfolds, it becomes a conversation between two voices, one reflective, the other forward-looking, each carrying its own version of “could”—the possibility of something unexpected, shared, and ultimately realized.