
POP ART
SCREEN PRINTING
Pop Art is a post war movement that initially emerged among pioneering graphic designers, such as Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein - and thus refers to the use of imagery seen in media and pop culture. Eye catching advertising techniques (bright colors and simplified graphics) paired with 'lowbrow' materials from the commercial design world (comic art and screen printing) are utilized to create bold statement pieces that convey a subtle message.
The "Disruptresses" series highlights female archetypes by stitching together multiple composites of various historical figures - as each piece is an amalgamation of several different, but similar, women. And while the faces become even more generalized through silkscreening, each of the women's implicit story is maintained in their gaze.









SILKSCREEN GRIDS
Traditional, mid-century silkscreen printing also integrates repetition, much like the repeating images of rhythmic pattern work. With repetition the image's meaning becomes both compressed and amplified at the same time. Even multiples of a single image in various color palettes creates a gestalt experience where the whole is greater than the sum of it








