"Art is made for people to react. Having a position means that what you are doing is needed and it is creating change. In the long term, many people will appreciate it." Art Aficionado. Alberta Legislature 2016, Fire and Rain project, Art Show & Tell, Listen.
Left Stage, Exit Right
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🌿 Three takahē wander the Rocky Mountain grass as if they’ve slipped through a seam in the world—ancient, blue‑green, and unhurried. In Māori folklore, the takahē were once thought to be messengers from the deep valleys, birds who carried the memory of the land itself. When they vanished, people believed they had simply stepped into the mist to rest. But the takahē returned—quietly, stubbornly, beautifully—reminding us that some stories refuse to end. Birds of a Feather XL
🎨 Pop Pop Dazzled by Every Day and Abstracts of Light and Shadows presents a découpé visual narrative cut-up on YouTube(s). A look into the past to glimpse the future unknown. I’ve interlaced recent and archived citizen-free news stories with layered sounds and visuals. This process births a new art form, crafting fresh narratives through the cut-up technique.
🌿 Three Grazing Takahē in the Rocky Mountain Grass. Paint was added outside the Alberta Legislature on April Fool's Day and inside Edmonton City Hall on Good Friday. April is Takahē Awareness Month in New Zealand. Tribute painting to Chicago's Virgil Abloh, 2019, Figures of Speech, Unified, Red Zipper Tie began with two Cree brothers adding paint inside the infamous BLM Pekiwewin homeless encampment.
2026-04-09, Painter's Notes, AI: Some folks chant, “No one is above the law,” but from where I stand, the loudest walls aren’t built by governments — they’re built by the media machines that decide who gets a microphone and who gets a muzzle. Nine years after the province tried to shut down my citizen‑free‑press reporting — and after the Sergeant‑at‑Arms told me my paintbrush was too loud — I walked back into the Legislature gallery. Not sneaking in. Not begging in. Walking in. Because the Fire and Rain project didn’t burn me out — it lit the fuse. The Charter says I have free speech, free expression, free press. Ink on paper. Rights on the books. But rights don’t mean much until institutions decide whether they’ll honour them or hide behind velvet ropes and laminated passes. Most of my freedoms came back. One stayed locked behind the glass. Because in this country, the gatekeepers aren’t elected — they’re broadcast. They’re syndicated. They’re sponsored. And they decide who counts as “press” before a single question is asked. Inside that Legislature — the so‑called people’s house — politics plays out like a theatre production. Spotlights. Scripts. And up in the gallery, the citizens who sketch, witness, document, are treated like stagehands without credentials. But I’ve been doing this for nineteen years. Nineteen years of citizen‑free‑news. Nineteen years of civic‑pop storytelling. Nineteen years of painting the moments that slip between the headlines. If democracy is a stage, then I’m not sitting in the cheap seats. I’m part of the cast — brush in hand, eyes open, telling the story the way I see it. Because every voice deserves space. Whether it comes from a newsroom or from a paint‑stained notebook in the back row of the gallery.