Portfolio > DRAWING ON WOOD

In his “drawing on wood” practice, the artist meticulously translates photographic observation into labor-intensive colored pencil renderings on wooden panels. This process—at once precise and deeply physical—creates a compelling interplay between human intention and the organic complexity of his chosen substrate. The wood is not merely a passive surface; its knots, grain, and textures actively disrupt and inform the drawing process. Each line must negotiate with the living memory of the material, creating a tension between control and surrender, between the artist’s hand and nature’s own mark-making. “I’m drawn to the relationship between image and substrate,” he explains. “The wood’s grain doesn’t just interrupt the image—it shapes it, informs it, becomes part of its story. It’s not just about representing something—it’s about resonating with it.”

Engaging deeply with post-photographic discourse, his work questions the place and purpose of the image in an era defined by speed, repetition, and digital saturation. Where photography captures in a fraction of a second, his process insists on slowness, on touch, on endurance. The drawings are acts of resistance—pushing against the ephemeral nature of screen-based imagery and reasserting the material weight of images in physical space. This slow, tactile labor becomes a form of meditation, a way of reclaiming time in image-making.

By re-materializing photographic images through hand-rendered marks on wood, he blurs the boundaries between reproduction and invention. The result is neither a photograph nor a traditional drawing, but a hybrid form that destabilizes the image’s historical claim to objectivity and permanence. In this space, memory is no longer fixed but fluid—woven into the shifting textures of the wood, shaped by the rhythms of the hand. Each work becomes a site of ongoing negotiation between perception, materiality, and meaning. In this way, his drawings are less about preserving a captured moment and more about reanimating it—offering a space where the past flickers through the present, and the surface itself becomes a field of resonance.

Last visit with Mom
color pencils on basswood panel
18" x 24"
2026
Two kids playing along the waterway in Muiden Netherlands
color pencils on basswood panel
18" x 24"
2026
Granny's Green Steps, Edinburgh Scotland
color pencils on basswood panel
16" x 20"
2025
Jamie at the Barnes / room 2 (in process)
color pencils on basswood panel
30" x 40"
2024
Jamie at the Barnes / room 2 (n process)
color pencils on basswood panel
30" x 40"
2024
Jamie at the Barnes / room 2
color pencils on basswood panel
30" x 40"
2024
Jaro Studencki
color pencils on basswood panel
24" x 36"
2025
Jaro Studencki
color pencils on basswood panel
24" x 36"
2025
"Penumbra - portrait of Kristen
color pencils on basswood panel
24" x 36"
2025
Portrait of Neil
color pencils on basswood panel
16" x 20"
2025
Self Portrait
color pencils on basswood panel
16" x 20"
2024
Portrait of my lovely mother Violet
color pencils on basswood panel
16" x 20"
2025
Momma
color pencils on basswood panel
18" x 24"
2024
Jake in Yosemite California in studio
color pencils on basswood panel
18" x 24"
2024
Wendy Babcox
color pencils on basswood panel
18" x 24"
2025
William S Burroughs at home
color pencils on basswood panel
24" x 36"
2025
William S Burroughs in backyard
color pencils on basswood panel
16" x 20"
2024
William S Burroughs in Lawrence, Kansas
color pencils on basswood panel
18" x 24"
2024