My Portfolio

A collection of works exploring memory, atmospheric landscapes and narrative wildlife.

My practice uses landscapes as a means to explore memory; how places hold emotion and shift over time, leaving behind lingering fragments.

Through sfumato glazing and layered color, alongside expressive mark-making, I aim to capture the sensation of returning to a place held in memory.

Seeds of Memory

24 × 24 in., Acrylic paint on canvas. (2026)

This work explores the quiet transmission of culture across generations. Considering the cultural exchange between Italy and Canada through migration, memory, heritage and ecological structures. Two Cardinals are depicted perched within the branches of a fig tree.The fig tree represents Italian heritage and the resilience of ancestors to take root and flourish in new environments. To subtly symbolize generations, the figs are depicted in different stages of development. The Northern Cardinals, Ontario’s provincial bird, represent resilience, adaptation, and remembrance. Together they create a merging of cultures, traditions and identities.

This work is a reflection of ancestral migrations and continuity; it considers memory not as a fixed moment but as something that grows, adapts and endures.

Memories of the Highlands of Scotland

A series made in 2025

Acrylic landscape painting of Glen Etive in the Scottish Highlands, featuring moody atmosphere, layered brushwork, and soft sfumato glazing.

Memories of the Highlands: Glen Etive

11 × 14 in., Acrylic paint on canvas board. (2025)

Set in the Scottish Highlands, Glen Etive is shaped by rocky terrain, flowing water, and shifting light. Through layered color and textured mark-making, this work explores how memory distills a place into fragments, moments of light, movement and surface.

This piece is currently located in the United Kingdom in a private collection.

Memories of Skye

24 × 36 in., Acrylic paint on canvas. (2025)

Drawn from a moment while traveling through the Isle of Skye, this piece reflects a quiet interruption within the landscape, a weathered fence line leaning into a vast shifting horizon.

Through layered color and textured mark-making, the scene becomes less about a fixed place and more about the way memory holds onto fragments ; atmosphere, distance and feeling. Subtle transitions of blues and greens , softened through glazing techniques, create a sense of depth that mirrors the way landscapes are remembered rather than seen; hazy, expansive, and quietly enduring.

This work is currently on display at the Southfield Community Center located in Caledon, ON. (Fall 2025-Spring 2026)

Memories of Skye II

24 × 36 in., Acrylic paint on canvas. (2025)

Positioned from the viewpoint of a single sheep, this piece invites the viewer into a quiet moment of observation. A gaze cast across water toward a distant presence. The landscape unfolds through layered greens and shifting light, grounded by the movement of the river cutting through the terrain.

Through textured mark-making and subtle glazing techniques, the scene reflects the way memory isolates moments; a glance, a feeling of separation and connection existing at once. The perspective places the viewer within the space, blurring the line between observer and subject.

This work is currently on display at the Sothfield Community Center located in Caledon, ON. (Fall 2025- Spring 2026)

Large Scale Projects

Selected works demonstrating large-scale and site-responsive practice


Commissioned Mural

Octopus Mural

Approximately 22 × 9 ft., acrylic on indoor sealed walls with architectural elements. (2024)

Located at Conversate Seafood and Steakhouse, Hamilton, ON.

This large-scale interior mural was developed in response to the architectural constraints of a stairwell, using the octopus form to guide movement across multiple intersecting planes. The composition extends fluidly along the walls and railing, integrating with the space to create a sense of continuity and immersion.

Made through layered applications of acrylic, the surface balances fine detail with bold, readable forms, allowing the work to function both up-close and at a distance. The work responds to its upscale environment through controlled color, rhythm and repetition, transforming a transition space into a dynamic visual experience.

The project reflects approach rooted in adapting imagery to a complex, site-specific environment.


Volunteer Set Painter

Scenic Backdrops: A Forest Study

4 × 13 ft. (3 panels), acrylic matte paint on donated material.

Collaboration with the Village Theatre of Waterdown.

Production: Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike from April 17th - May 3rd 2026.

These large-scale backdrop panels were repurposed from a previous production and completely reimagined to form a forest environment alongside another backdrop. working across multiple surfaces, the focus was on building depth, movement, and readability from a distance, while ensuring the imagery remained responsive to the theatrical lighting conditions.

Through layered color and expressive mark-making, the panels were developed to integrate seamlessly with surrounding set elements, balancing painterly detail with clarity at scale.

This project reflects an ongoing expansion into large-scale, site-responsive work.