I love that description. It really resonates with me. I think of my work as painting internal landscapes. While there are elements of 'realistic landscapes,' they aren't meant to be specific places. They are more like anchors for a feeling or a memory.
The more abstract forms—the 'liquid geometry' and 'ambient psychedelia'—are my attempts to give shape to the formless. How do you paint a memory, a fleeting thought, or the feeling of a dream slowly fading? These shapes are my vocabulary for those experiences. The geometry represents the logic we try to impose on our feelings, while the psychedelic elements capture their chaotic, unpredictable, and often beautiful nature.
So, to answer your question, while the work isn't fully abstract because it’s rooted in real human experience, it’s not communicating a single narrative. It’s trying to communicate the feeling of consciousness itself—the way our minds constantly blend the concrete and the ephemeral.