The Wild Ones

An ongoing body of work exploring iconic and national animals, as they represent a country's spirit or ecological landscape, and native plants through a global ecological and geopolitical lens. Grounded in research and observation, the series explores how living systems are forced to adapt within landscapes shaped by human intervention, climate disruption, and political boundaries.

The work is divided into two interconnected parts:

Fauna & Flora

The Wild Ones - Fauna focuses on iconic and national animals from around the world and represents a country's spirit or ecological landscapes they now inhabit. These paintings consider migration, displacement, and survival as ecosystems are altered by development, extraction, war, and climate change. These animals are often presented as symbols of culture, strength, identity, or power; here, they are returned to their biological reality - living beings navigating shrinking or radically transformed habitats.

The Wild Ones - Flora centers provincial, territorial, and national flowers - plants elevated to symbolic status yet often overlooked as living systems. Rendered as plastic building blocks, the flowers appear bright, permanent, and manufactured. This material language contrasts with their ecological reality: plants dependent on pollinators, seasonal cycles, intact soil, climate stability, and the pests they battle. Many carry long histories of medicinal, cultural, and ecological significance, particularly within Indigenous and local knowledge systems.This work sits at the intersection of my background in nature-based expressive arts therapy and my commitment to ecological storytelling. I'm interested in how painting can create space for reflection, for sitting with complexity rather than rushing toward solutions. These flowers speak to me because they carry dual identities: cherished symbols and overlooked organisms.

These works are held as witness - reminders and invitations of reciprocity, responsibility, and renewal.

The Wild Ones is an invitation to look closer and recognize that national and iconic symbols are not fixed, but living systems shaped by political decisions, environmental realities, and collective responsibility.


The Wild Ones - GeoPolitical Landscape

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