Abstraction as an Act of Trust

Abstraction asks me to trust — the process, the materials, the moment. It’s where I let the work lead, embracing the unknown as part of the language.

Abstraction has always felt like both a leap and a letting go. When I step into the language of abstraction, I am choosing to trust the process more than the plan, the gesture more than the outline. It’s a space where meaning doesn’t arrive fully formed — it emerges, stumbles, reveals itself in fragments, if at all.

In the studio, I often begin with a vague sense of direction, a color, a shape, an impulse. But as the painting unfolds, I have to allow it to take me somewhere I didn’t expect. This is the act of trust — trusting that the work knows something I don’t, that what feels chaotic might become coherence in its own time. And if it doesn’t, that’s part of the truth too.

Abstraction, for me, isn’t about escaping reality. It’s about opening the space for deeper, less literal ways of seeing and feeling. It invites me — and the viewer — to dwell in ambiguity, to make space for contradictions, to linger in the unresolved. There’s a tenderness in that, a willingness to not know everything at once. It’s the same kind of trust I bring to the blank canvas, to the creative process itself, and to the moments in life when clarity feels far away.

“Abstraction is where I go to practice trust — in the materials, in the moment, in myself.”

You can view the full Geometric Splendor Collection here.

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How Abstraction Invites the Viewer to Co-Create Meaning

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Exploring the Intersection of Mathematics, Philosophy, and Abstract Art