They say, "Draw what you see." So I draw the absence in hotel windows, the way a deadline breathes down the neck of twilight, the geometry of a loneliness that scales without losing resolution. I trace the curve of a client’s silence— that bezier path between “make it pop” and “we went in another direction.”
Deskpack illustrator: portable, precarious, rendering the invisible contract between hunger and beauty. My masterpiece is not a poster or a brand. It’s the quiet, terrible freedom of being able to fold up your whole life and still call it unsaved changes . deskpack illustrator
At night, I pack up: tablet into sleeve, stylus into its velvet sarcophagus. The backpack sighs—a lung full of unused gradients, of sketches for a comic about a girl who turns into fog. I zip it shut. But the work leaks. It always leaks. A single pixel under my fingernail. A layer named sadness set to Multiply. An artboard that stretches from my sternum to the edge of what I’ll never be paid to say. They say, "Draw what you see