The Muddy Water series draws its inspiration from the muddy, meandering waters of Louisiana—where movement is constant, subtle, and deeply rooted in memory. These abstract works are my visual response to that landscape, where water is both life-giver and storyteller, carving through soil with grace and power.
Using layered applications of pigment, gestural linework, and fluid washes, I sought to echo the rhythm of the river: how it pulses through bayous and backwaters, how it stains and softens, how it never truly stops moving. Earth tones reference the dense sediment and red clay, while the sharp contrast of blue and black evoke sky, shadow, and the depth beneath the surface.
Each piece is its own dance—an improvisation shaped by the tension between control and surrender, much like the river itself. In this body of work, abstraction becomes a way to remember water—not just how it looks, but how it feels.
In Muddy Waters 2, the palette turns richer, earthier. Browns dominate the surface, evoking wet sediment and shadowed bends. Sharp reds and rusty streaks cut through the composition, echoing the clay-rich riverbanks found further north, near the Mississippi state border. These elements suggest both surface tension and submerged memory, capturing the layered story of water carving through land—forceful, persistent, and endlessly reshaping.
- Subject Matter: Abstract
- Collections: Arylic on paper, Muddy Waters Series