About me

My work is rooted in graffiti and street culture and shaped by a lifelong need to draw, mark, and question. I have been creating images for as long as I can remember—first on paper, then on walls, skin, objects, and anything that could carry a trace of thought or emotion.
Visually, my style exists somewhere between dirty psychedelic pop surrealism and comic-influenced cartoon art. It resists clear classification and deliberately crosses boundaries. Sexual symbolism, tension, and discomfort are not decorative elements but tools—used to expose inner conflicts, societal contradictions, and suppressed impulses. What may appear raw or retro at first glance often reveals layers of detail, hidden narratives, and visual play on closer inspection.
Each piece functions as an entry point into my subconscious: sometimes critical, sometimes melancholic, sometimes disturbing, yet always vibrant, colorful, and laced with dark humor. I am interested in images that challenge rather than soothe—works that linger, provoke, and invite reflection.
Material and surface are equally important to me. I work with ballpoint pens, markers, spray paint, acrylics, watercolors, and tattoo machines, applying them across a wide range of media. Paper, cardboard, canvas, skin, walls, everyday objects, and discarded materials all serve as potential carriers of meaning. Transforming the ordinary into something charged and alive is part of the process.
Alongside visual art, writing plays a significant role in my practice. My texts, like my images, confront taboos and question comfort zones. At its core, my work seeks to do what art has always done at its best: to unsettle, to provoke thought, and to challenge perception.
I approach life and art with honesty, humor, and a sharp sense of irony. My work continues to evolve toward a clearer expression of my own truth—unfiltered, unapologetic, and direct.
F.Y.I.A.A.A. — Fuck You, I Am An Artist.
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