Somewhere along the line of time, artists lost their audience. Art has become increasingly more about art itself, context fed by previous context. Artists have found ways to isolate themselves by ignoring the people who view their work. Furthermore, modes of advertising and design have taken over for religious iconography. Cartoons have taken over for Caravaggio and Corbert. The use of art as a communication has changed.

I view my work, not as revolutionary, but as a step back in time, knowing what we have learned from our modern forms of communication. I like to use the explosion of color and design that is inherent in advertising and cartoons, to convey, in a simple fashion, the broader ideas of social and personal philosophy, ideas of scientific theory and discovery, and commentary on life as I see it. I utilize familiar information to provide the viewer with a basic construct for understanding the ideas I am trying to convey.

To me, art has three parts: the idea, the carrying out of that idea, and the reaction to the creation. It is the responsibility of the artist, not to make the viewer understand directly what they are thinking, but to guide them through a funnel-like construct to the possibilities that the artwork can hold.