Over painted genuine postage stamps with handmade tiny frames, in hardwood frame with museum acrylic.

Royal Comedian

A witty nod to Maurizio Cattelan’s Comedian: regal figures brandish bananas affixed to their portraits with silver tape—transforming royal iconography into pop‑culture commentary, where powdered wigs meet street‑corner absurdity.


The Crown and the Felt

Queen Elizabeth II meets Muppet theatre in this felted mash-up—her iconic profile reworked as puppet satire, poking fun at royal performance and public identity.


Queens without Thrones

Portraits of Princess Diana are reshaped into a gallery of legendary women—blending her image with figures from Cleopatra to Britney Spears. The work meditates on the evolution of female iconography, power, and public perception.


Baseball Heroes

Re-imagines the sport’s most iconic players as mythic figures—superhuman in strength, stature, and spirit. Blending athletic legend with comic book bravado, the series celebrates the larger-than-life aura of baseball’s greatest stars.


Stampsy – The Destruction of “From Childhood to Anarchy”

Beginning with an original painted series, the artist proceeds to destroy each miniature—a deliberate homage to Banksy’s weaponized self-destruction, and a biting commentary on the commodification and fragility of contemporary art.


Royal Comedian

The British monarch dons a unique clown mask—an allegory for how entertainers and royalty blur roles, prompting us to reconsider how performance shapes our shifting view of power and spectacle.