Limited Edition Prints
Limited edition prints are printed on Canson 310gsm Photo Rag using 12-colour pigment ink. Each piece is part of a hand-numbered limited edition collection of 100.
Limited edition prints are printed on Canson 310gsm Photo Rag using 12-colour pigment ink. Each piece is part of a hand-numbered limited edition collection of 100.
Consumed asks a simple but haunting question: what are we really eating?
A study from the UN revealed that there are over 50 trillion microplastics in the ocean, 500 times more than stars in our galaxy (UN, 2017). By 2050, it is estimated that the ocean will carry more plastic than fish (UN, 2017). This collection explores the irony of human habit and how it has seeped into the most intimate parts of our existence. I wanted to reveal the reality of a new ingredient present in our lives, microplastics. It is no longer just ocean life that suffers; humans, too, have become victims of their own choices and behaviours.
Through stark imagery, Consumed traces the hidden cycle of waste: plastics discarded, drifting back into ecosystems, and ultimately, into ourselves. Microplastics become an invisible seasoning, a quiet reminder that nothing we throw away ever truly disappears.
In Plain Sight is a collection that draws attention to what is often overlooked, the fragile, the forgotten, the unseen. Each work begins with a single natural object: a pangolin scale, a coral skeleton, a burnt banksia cone. Small and intricate, these fragments hold deep ecological, emotional, and symbolic meaning.
Visually, the collection is inspired by the polished, popular aesthetic of contemporary design, from Assouline travel books to trendy botanical posters and graphic prints. At first glance, the series feels playful and decorative, but on closer inspection, what appears to be a beautiful shell is actually a single endangered pangolin scale. What looks like vibrant coral is in fact a moss-covered skeleton, bleached and decayed. What seems like a floral cone is a banksia burnt to its core by bushfires.
With this collection, I wanted to be cheeky and subversive, to blend visual appeal with uncomfortable truths. It's an invitation to look again, to think twice, and to reflect on the environmental and social issues we so often overlook.