View Public Art
Saturday, October 26
Buy tickets
Start Making
By Topic
Career Pathways
Other Opportunities
Learn More
About Us
People
Connect with us
Student Artist
Medical School 2027
This self portrait addresses my invisible disability and the words around me are a mix of medical statements and emotional entries from my journal.
2018
Graphite on Paper
A cat in a Japanese restaurant.
2019
3D computer graphics
This piece captures the fleeting, but golden moment of connection between the deer and the viewer. A reminder that beautiful things are fleeting.
2015
Oil on canvas
Location: Law School terrace
2020
Digital Illustration
This piece explores gender. On the left are stereotypically feminine things, on the right masculine, and in the middle a “beautiful” mix of the two.
Photograph/Scanned Image
I wanted to render a tree during a vibrant morning on The Farm from a design perspective.
2016
Ink Resist
Giant ladle meant to represent heaven, a room where everyone figured out that to feed themselves, they have to feed each other. + Harley Quinn’s bat
2023
Wood sculpture, Metal Sculpture. Can also display photos attached instead
Impressions of animal magnetism and the collective unconscious.
2017
Digital Visual Art
A colorful map collage built by the greater Stanford community, accompanied by 2 mixed media pieces that honor and appreciate the Stanford experience.
Link to Website
Mixed media: acrylic and oil paint on canvas, vinyl, press-on stickers, photographs, repurposed paper, wood veneer, laser cut mirror, coins, paper money, playing cards
This piece is a manipulated photograph printed on metal.
Mixed Media on Metal
This drawing was an attempt to capture my feelings about Stanford: an intimidating fortress of possibilities.
Markers on paper
This piece depicts a fictionalized memory of my grandfather, who I only knew through his woven hats and birds passed down through my family.
Oil Paint on Canvas
This series is meant to bring inspiration, energy and presence to the broader community during a difficult time of shelter-in-place and quarantine.
Acrylic gouache on Yupo Polypropylene Paper
Indigo mountains and a somber gray sky are reflected in the clear water of Lake Tahoe.
2022
Oil paint on canvas
A love letter to passionate yet high-strung and jaded Generation Z, this series focuses on youth’s struggles to find meaning in today’s online world.
2021
Photography
This piece is a self-portrait that puts emphasis on gaze and light to convey a subject that is emerging from the shadows.
With a color palette and thematic melancholy inspired by Picasso’s Blue Period, this intimate vignette chronicles my experience with depression.
Oil on wood panel
The emotional turmoil of Fall quarter. As students process their new reality, they long for human connection but also feel empty and purposeless.
This painting is a depiction of my first month here at Stanford.
Water Color on Paper