26” x 39” Cotton. Artwork sold unframed.
Colored pulp is a liquid medium that consists of finely beaten plant fibers suspended in water and colored with pigments or dyes.
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This piece is one in a series of pulp paintings inspired by a commission of the Albemarle Sound between the Inner and Outer Banks of North Carolina. I spent long hours absorbing the look, feel, texture, and vastness of the water. Its shifting surface of wind and cloud stayed with me long after the original piece was completed and it continued to resurface in my work, finding new form and context.
The greens and blues of sky and water, constantly disturbed by wind and passing clouds, became embedded in my visual language. Back home in South Texas, those water images gradually transformed into open fields of swaying grasses beneath expansive skies that stretch toward the horizon. Green fields, camouflaged by drifting cloud shadows, dance and shift just as the water did—a continuous palette of greens pulled and reshaped.
Over time, this series has become less about specific geography and more about abstract perception—about what we see in the space above and below rather than what is physically present. Shadows and shifting shapes create their own version of reality, inviting the viewer into that space between observation and interpretation.



