Wall Art:
See The Body is Good
work on Walls

A sitting room with the photo of Breathing In What’s Mine -- A cacophony of colors, lines and glitter swirling in a woman’s head highlighting especially her hair. You can almost touch it. The Boston based comedian Lamont Price @lpizzle12 says about this piece: A woman with a gorgeous afro unapologetically breathing in life. Why should she apologize? She’s merely taking back a small portion of what belongs to her. Of what she contributes. The afro automatically makes me think of women of color, specifically Black women who constantly give of themselves while routinely receiving precious little in return. The healthcare system has a sordid history of underperforming and, at times, outright dismissing the humanity of Black women. This includes the ominous mortality rates when giving birth. Often viewed as being able to sustain a great deal of pain to disastrous results. Treated as caricatures. Women with disabilities who are sterilized without consent after giving birth. These are aspects of our healthcare community that must change. Givers of life need not ask for permission to breathe in what is rightfully theirs. Their breaths are our breaths. Their comfort is our comfort. Their life breeds all our lives.

A living room with the photo of a beating heart in reds and yellow on a light blue background...

A living room with the photo Hot Zone, it is a photo of a stencil of my brain filled with the concentric circles of a red hot eclectic stove top. In my mind, it looks like the heat map of two contents or two people dancing.

A sitting room with the photo of Beating Heart at Sunrise of a stencil of an anatomical heart filled with ethereal deep pink that fades to black on top, glowing in teds and orange like a sunrise.

A bedroom with the photo of Thinking about Accessibility, an image of a shape of a girl’s profile embossed with the texture and pattern of a curb cut. The small and large bumps create the features of her face: her eyes, her lips.

A living room with the photo Fast Brain: Neurodiversity symbol depicting a person's profile with a brain filled with dynamic lines and colors, capturing the essence of rapid thinking.

A living room with the photo Climate Change and Accessibility: The Intermediation Accessibility Symbol filled with the Sustaining All Life logo, resembling a sunflower's center in a vibrant Fibonacci pattern.

A sitting room with the photo Hot Zone, it is a photo of a stencil of my brain filled with the concentric circles of a red hot eclectic stove top. In my mind, it looks like the heat map of two contents or two people dancing.

A living room with the photo Holding Up the Son, A full-body stencil with hands raised and a sun above, captured against a backdrop of colorful water resembling a dress.