abstract
figurative
gridology
pastiche
colour
episodic
Film

Film brings language to visual art. Sequencing images allows for blending poetic narrative with visual stimuli. I see film as an occasion for juxtaposing ideas and exploring themes. I am working on a number of short projects.

At the ESL class the students practice the pronunciation of “th”. “I thought a thought but the thought I thought, was not the thought, I thought I thought”. This could easily be mantra of our age. And the fact that the English language has contributed substantially to the creation of our global village goes without saying.

At the Oil Sands of Canada’s province of Alberta, it takes two barrels of pure glacial water to extract one barrel of oil. a litre of bottled water costs more than a litre of gasoline, So which do you think is more vital to life: Greed or stupidity?

This scene depicts Snailfingers, an imaginary aboriginal spirit, visiting an ancestral petroglyph rock, located in Ontario Canada. The voiceover is a poem about remembrance. My way of paying homage to the people whose land I live on.

A White Anglo-Saxon Professional (WASP) woman has been obsessing over bees. While she works at an insemination lab, the protagonist relates a dream about an orchard and its apiary. She laments the loss of the bees’ honey as it is stolen from them, and replaced by sugar water and antibiotics.

film