The figures in SHOUT rage and cringe, kiss and kill, depending on the angle of view and where the light strikes. This piece is about rage, and what happens when the brain shuts down, leaving only the primitive animal cortex to respond.
]]>Part of a new series of architectural wall tiles, with Ms. Morgan’s signature hidden faces and human elements. (See if you can find them)
]]>Part of a new series of architectural wall tiles, with Ms. Morgan’s signature hidden faces. (See if you can find them)
]]>A series of nine studies for a larger work in the Emergents series, these pieces explore the what might happen if plants took on aspects of humanity.
]]>A series of nine studies for a larger work in the Emergents series, these pieces explore the what might happen if plants took on aspects of humanity.
]]>A series of nine studies for a larger work in the Emergents series, these pieces explore the what might happen if plants took on aspects of humanity.
]]>A fragmented, momentary view of a graphic novel moment
]]>His mother hurried him to the safety of the cramped apartment, but like some medieval herald, he fled to the window to blow a steady stream of bubbles. The grit and grime of the city below faded, and for a moment he was a carefree boy on the prairie, watching the bubbles dance in the sun.
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