Share this post

Take What You Can Carry

His father in government custody, Ken is one of the over 100,000 Japanese Americans forced to move to makeshift relocation camps in the tumultuous months after Pearl Harbor. As traditional family bonds fray, and sometimes break, he stumbles toward a state of gaman: enduring the seemingly unbearable with patience and dignity. Excerpts and Reviews can be found clicking this (LINK)

Other related articles

Sacred Grove

My 25 page graphic essay about the bioregion of Monte Amiata in Southern Tuscany is up on the Cultivate Journal website. Based on my experience

Assembling New Jersey

I created a series of collages to accompany an interview with John McPhee for Dense Magazine. I love the design so I’m posting full pages.

Sea Breeze

My graphic essay about a New Jersey beach town reclaimed by the sea has been published by the Evergreen Review. Read it (HERE)

Fossil Fuel Gaslighting

Here is recent comic for the Los Angeles Times inspired by the designation of “gaslighting” as the “word of the year” by Merriam Webster. You

Gestures of Disappearance

I have two pieces, The Future of Ruins and Monuments of Great Notch in this show at VisArts in Rockville , Maryland. Both works come

What Will Remain

An illustrated essay ruminating on the contemporary relevance of Chinese landscape painting. Appeared in World War 3 illustrated.

Burnt White

Burnt White | Colored Ink | 24 tall x 18 wide

Charspore

Charspore | Colored Ink | 17 tall x 14 wide