Art is a form of power that operates through images rather than decree. It shapes perception, organizes memory, and gives structure to experiences that resist easy narration. Long before it persuades, art reorients: it trains attention, alters scale, and determines what is allowed to remain visible.
My own work begins from this premise. Images are not neutral, and symbols are never incidental. They accumulate meaning through repetition, circulation, and use—through being carried, held, worn, or encountered unexpectedly. Over time, certain forms insist on returning. A flower becomes a sign of refusal rather than ornament. A future date becomes a horizon rather than a prediction. These are not abstractions; they are working tools.
Throughout history, images have done work that laws and speeches cannot. They have carried dissent across borders, encoded refusal under regimes of surveillance, and preserved ways of seeing that institutions sought to erase. Art does not simply reflect power; it negotiates with it, absorbs its pressure, and—at times—outlasts it. Protest art makes this dynamic explicit. It demands clarity without simplification, endurance without stasis.
This writing approaches art as an active force rather than a finished object. It follows the development of visual language across projects—how symbols are pared down, stressed, tested, and redeployed. In works such as Resist Flower™, the image functions less as illustration than as a carrier: something meant to travel, to persist, and to remain legible under strain. In Project 2029, the visual field expands toward the future, using speculation not as fantasy but as a form of pressure on the present.
Art also operates where official systems fail. It holds grief that cannot be processed publicly, gives form to anger that has no sanctioned outlet, and creates coherence amid fragmentation. These are not sentimental claims. They are structural ones. Making and returning to images becomes a way of maintaining continuity when language collapses or is rendered unusable.
The posts here move between reflection and process. Some examine finished work; others remain unresolved, thinking through form, failure, and revision as part of the practice itself. Taken together, they reflect a belief that art is not supplemental to political or social life, but embedded within it—shaping how resistance is imagined, sustained, and remembered.
This is not art as decoration, nor art as explanation. It is art as a method of pressure, persistence, and attention: a way of holding ground when certainty is unavailable, and of insisting that meaning—however provisional—can still be made.