Pretty Chaos
There is something honest about letting things fall apart a little. These pieces began without a strict plan, just color, shape, and instinct moving faster than logic. What looks scattered at first starts to feel intentional the longer you sit with it. Every fragment finds its place eventually.
I was drawn to the tension between control and release. Cutting, layering, building, then stepping back and letting the composition breathe on its own. The result is loud but balanced, messy but precise. A kind of visual noise that settles into rhythm.
Pretty Chaos lives in that in-between space. Where nothing is perfect, but everything belongs.




Comments
Post a Comment