Litel Floer Botanical Art Center
Visual identity and spatial reimagining of an abandoned 1930s Chicago church transformed into a botanical art center.
This project integrates historical photographs and plant to reflect both the building’s past and its living future.
Alice In Wonderland Public Theater Poster
Poster Created for a public Theater Performance Inspired By the work of Paula Scher and Pentagram. Displayed In the lobby of The Fashion Institute of Technology
Daisies Film Screening
An experimental triptych created for a screening at Metrograph Theater, inspired by Daisies (1966). All elements are entirely handmade using stamping and collage techniques, then scanned and assembled digitally. The triptych references the anarchic spirit of the Czech New Wave.
The video piece incorporates clips from the film itself, interwoven with the handmade elements used in the posters.
Posters Printed and displayed in the Fashion Institute of Technology Annual Trypic Show
Grapefruit by Yoko Ono
This video explores selected instruction poems from Grapefruit by Yoko Ono through sound-led visual interpretation.
Poster Created for a public Theater Performance Inspired By the work of Paula Scher and Pentagram. Displayed In the lobby of The Fashion Institute of Technology
Owl’s Head Production & Film Festival
Centered around a grassroots film festival for emerging filmmakers. Inspired by New York’s indie film scene and DIY culture.
This project integrates hand drawn elements and typography to reflect the chaotic creative energy of young filmmakers in a big city.
Park Pals
a mobile app designed for urban dwellers seeking nature, connection, and community.
Built around the idea of escaping the city to find meaningful experiences outdoors, the app helps users discover local hikes and connect with like-minded people to join them.
City Type
CIty Type is a two-part project that explores the intersection of typography, urban waste, and the accidental poetry of everyday life in New York City.
The first component is a booklet of photographs composed of letter-forms of found objects and signage seen on the streets of manhattan.
As an extension of this typographic exploration, the letter "M" standing for Manhattan was constructed by physically assembling a "M" from various pieces of trash found throughout the borough.
This interpretation brings the flat, photographic concept of the book into the tangible, three-dimensional space.
Sink Into More
Zine exhibiton marketing exploring the overwhelming realities of water pollution.
The title reflects the emotional weight of becoming informed, the deeper you delve into the facts, the more it feels like you’re sinking, trapped in a cycle of contamination and neglect.
Handmade ink textures play a central role in the visual language of Sink Into More, echoing the fluidity, chaos, and unpredictability of polluted water.