"Broken ≠ Worthless" – SOLD
This is a raw, surreal anthem for the discarded - cracked souls, grieving hearts, and shattered objects the world calls worthless. It's a love letter to the overlooked, stitched with a simple truth: one person's trash is another's treasure. Through organized chaos, drenched in defiant beauty, it sings of resilience, radiant and real.
My mother always said dogs were better than people, and she wasn't wrong. At the ice cream shop, she'd buy three cones: one for her, one for me, one for our collie, Frosty. At night, she'd pause at my door, watching me curled on the floor, bed surrendered to the dog. Her soft smile slipped away, wordless.
When she died, grief didn't just settle - it snapped life's volume knob, leaving muted colors and static, like snow on a broken TV humming in an empty room. I bought a collie puppy, a living echo of Frosty, of my mother. I dragged her through L.A. - diners, friends' couches, hikes - chasing flickers of what felt like lasting happiness. But financial strain unraveled it all, each bill a cut deeper than the last. I tried stitching life back together with rusted thread and cheap whisky, a seamstress of sorrow with a buzzsaw heart. I left my collie with my stepmother for a brief spell. She sold her - like a $5 blender at a yard sale, just another thing to toss. No call. No warning. Gone. I stopped talking. I made art, smoked cigarettes, and let the world rot beyond my window.
Nights found me alone on the porch, chain-smoking like it was the only thread holding me together. The world blurred, but the smoke gave shape to the stillness. That's when she appeared - a street dog, ribs sharp, eyes wary, creeping closer each night like she was unraveling the riddle of me. At first, she kept her distance, half-curious, half-ready to bolt. Probably smelled the rot - mustard-stained nicotine, the stale scent of a man life had kicked down too many times. For days, we sat in silence, two broken things staring at the sky. I'd light another cigarette; she'd inch closer. A silent rhythm formed - a fragile game of trust, rules scratched in ash, pieces carved from shattered glass. I'd shift to give her space; she'd edge nearer. Each cigarette burned a hole in the wall between us. Through those holes, something warm crept in - a piece of me I thought was lost, still craving connection. She showed me that even broken clocks and busted men can tick right sometimes, flipping a middle finger to time itself. One person's trash is another's treasure.
In the artwork, a central figure sits defiantly on a throne-like couch, crowning herself ruler of her own chaos, forging society's rejection into raw power. Beside her, a black cat - echoing the street dog's cautious trust - sits as a symbol of earned loyalty, a stray turned treasure. Above, an oversized, angry child's face looms, confronting the inner child that once branded them "trash."
Broken ≠ Worthless is an unapologetic declaration: what's cracked isn't worthless, and what's discarded can still shine. It's a messy, beautiful reminder that some things aren't meant to be fixed - just seen for what they truly are: resilient, radiant, and real
Neon Diaries is a visual metaphor - every artwork I create is born from a personal story, much like ink spilled in a private journal. But unlike hidden pages, my art lays bare my deepest thoughts for all to see. In Neon Diaries, she is surrounded by floating electric monitors. Each glowing screen reveals a distinct futuristic journal entry - a metaphor for the way all my artwork tells stories. And this piece, in particular, explains how I came to that style of creating.