Kama-Lizard
Kama-Lizard (2025) fuses eroticism and contemplation through a hybrid body reclaiming sensuality as wisdom. The entwined figures challenge patriarchal shame around female pleasure, positioning the lizard as philosopher rather than primitive. Within Caribbean feminist cosmologies, desire becomes resistance—a sacred intelligence bridging body, instinct, and spiritual sovereignty.
Dimensions: 12 in x 16 in. Original artwork – Watercolor on canvas paper
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Too Big For New York
Read moreToo Big For New York (2026)
Original Linocut Print
Hand-pulled linocut on archival premium paperPerched above the endless geometry of the city, Too Big for NY captures the tension between ambition and exhaustion, intimacy and isolation. A solitary figure stands at the edge of the skyline, coat caught in the wind like a flag of survival, while below the city stretches endlessly outward: dense, relentless, electric. Beside her, a quiet white cat watches in silence, grounding the scene with a strange tenderness, as if guarding a private moment the city was never meant to witness.
This piece reflects the emotional architecture of New York itself: the hunger to become larger than fear, larger than limitation, yet still searching for a place soft enough to land. The title speaks not to physical scale, but to emotional magnitude. To outgrow the pressure. To realize your inner life no longer fits neatly inside the machinery of speed, expectation, and noise.
Hand-carved and printed through the traditional linocut process, the work embraces dramatic contrast, intricate mark-making, and the raw physicality of carved line. Every cut carries movement and tension, transforming rooftops, clouds, and shadows into rhythmic textures that echo both the pulse of the city and the interior landscape of the figure herself.
Printed on archival premium paper, this original work balances noir-like atmosphere with poetic stillness, making it a striking centerpiece for collectors drawn to contemporary printmaking, urban narratives, and emotionally charged visual storytelling. 🌒🐈⬛
Dimensions: 12 in x 16 in. Original artwork – printed on Archival premium paper.
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Eat a Bullfrog
Read moreEat a Bullfrog (2025) merges two potent archetypes—the bull and the frog—into a single mythic creature. The bull, symbol of power and virility, and the frog, emblem of transformation and rain, meet in a luminous body that pulses between masculine and amphibian, earth and water. Its posture echoes the sensual geometries of the Kama Sutra, suggesting balance between desire and meditation. Rendered in tropical gradients of coral, jade, and gold, the figure embodies the hybrid spirit of Indo-Caribbean culture, where Indian, African, and Taíno mythologies intertwine. The work re-imagines the creature as a cosmic mediator, linking fertility to consciousness, ritual to instinct. In its still gaze and poised form, The Bull-Frog Sutra asks how sensuality and spirituality coexist—and whether creation itself begins in the shared pulse of animal and human breath.
Dimensions: 12 in x 16 in. Original artwork – Digital painting printed on paper
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Sisterhood Fire Escape
Read moreSisterhood on a Brooklyn Fire Escape (2005)
Two women, wrapped in color and memory, share late-night cafecito on a Brooklyn fire escape.The glow of candles, the hum of Sunset Park, the softness of sisterhood — this piece celebrates the quiet moments where women hold each other up, breathe, and reclaim joy.
Bold patterns, warm light, and deep urban blues collide to create a scene that feels like home, like culture, like resistance through tenderness.
Dimensions: 12 in x 16 in. Original artwork – Digital painting printed on Archival premium paper.
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Birth of Caribbean Venus
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