Detail from my public mural at Roeland Park, "Giving Back"

I started painting murals when I was traveling as a backpacker in South America in 2014. Since then, I’ve created over 20 murals around the world - in Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Ireland, India, United States and more. I currently use eco-friendly interior and exterior paint from ECOS Paints to create my murals. This means that the materials I use are non-toxic, they produce zero VOCs and they are sustainability sourced.

My books are open for mural projects:

  • Kansas City: January 2023 - end of March 2023.

  • Upper Peninsula of Michigan: April 2023 - December 2023.

My books are always open for digital murals/ vinyl installations.

Please contact me with any questions regarding my murals here.

~ Murals ~

~ Non-toxic paints ~

For several years I’ve been using sustainable art materials to create my pieces. These include vegan and non-toxic watercolor paint, sustainably harvested natural pigments to create my handmade acrylic paint, upcycled materials, secondhand frames and brushes and more!

My online shop is closed for now, but feel free to contact me to see what I have available.

If you’re interested in a commissioned piece contact me here. Only USA shipping.

I’m currently selling all of my ready-to-go artwork at markets and fairs. Please check my Instagram and Facebook profiles to learn about my upcoming events.

~ Mushroom Art ~

These pieces are drawings carved directly onto the pore surface of a kind of wild mushroom commonly called "Artist Conks." Each specimen was sustainability harvested by the artist herself in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan during the summer of 2022. While the mushrooms are fresh, their porous side is white, but it turns brown when scratched or touched, making the process of creating a composition a very delicate one. Once the drawings are finished, the mushrooms are allowed to dry, and the images are preserved on their surfaces for decades without any kind of varnish.

I am truly fond of this technique because it makes me feel more connected to the forests in which these mushrooms grow. I believe that this is a highly sustainable method of creating art: only the fruiting body of the mushroom is harvested, leaving the mycelium to keep growing and creating more mushrooms next year – a process no more damaging to the organism than the plucking of an apple from an apple tree. The act of collecting the specimens also serve to scatter their spores around the forest, thus contributing to their reproductive cycle. 

       Ganoderma applanatum grows all around the United States, but it doesn’t make a profitable canvas for art stores and big companies due to its delicate nature and the short time frame for creating a piece (only a few days) before the mushrooms start to dry out. The search for the mushroom, the act of harvesting, and the creation of the artwork itself are all practices in mindfulness which establish a direction relationship between the artist, her medium, and Nature as a whole. 

Please contact me about any inquiries or commissioned pieces.

~ Digital art ~

I create digital art for magazines, vinyl murals, websites, banners and more. This is a technique that I deeply enjoy since it gives me the opportunity to create very diverse pieces that can be sent anywhere around the world.

In 2022 I collaborated with Art In the Loop and with the Kansas City Streetcar team to create art installations for the streetcar shelters in downtown KC. I created the pieces digitally an then these were printed in vinyl and they were installed at the streetcar shelters.

In the summer of 2023 I created 3 digital artworks in collaboration with the Johnson County Library to do a courier van “wrap”. These van is currently driving about 200 miles a day through the city showcasing my work!

I also created a piece for a mural installation at Walmart in Manhattan, KS.

~ Diverse techniques ~

I truly enjoy creating art pieces with all kinds of materials and mediums. In my search for sustainable art techniques I’ve created handwoven baskets made with pine needles, I’ve sewed clothing using only fabric scraps, I’ve given instruments like guitars and drums a new look using handmade acrylics and much more.

Coming up - In the next few months I’ll be painting bushel gourds that my family and friends grew in their chemical-free gardens in Kansas City and Wisconsin. For this project I’ll exclusively be using non-toxic acrylics made by me and I’ll varnish the gourds with plant-based vanish.

If you would like me to create one of my sustainable clothing pieces, upcycled sculptures or if you just would like to see my art on something of your just contact me! I’m always open to working on new projects.