Photos (unframed) available in two sizes: 24"x32" ($295) and 8"x10" ($95).
Prices don't include tax and shipping.
Email me with the title of the image you want and I'll take care of the rest.
Note: All images are also available framed, in custom sizes, and on different surfaces (aluminum, acrylic and wood). Contact me for details.

Glendale (Brand Blvd.)

Los Angeles (Red Figure)

New York City (89th Street)

Oaxaca (José María Morelos)

Oaxaca (M. Bravo)

Oaxaca (San Augustin)

Sardegna (Orgosolo Wall)

Sardegna (Orgosolo)

Oaxaca (Red Fish)

Los Angeles (Gallery Wall)

Oaxaca (Hotel Interior)

Brooklyn (Dunce Flowers)

Brooklyn (Take A Knee)

Cypress Park (Fence)

Highland Park (Factory)

Highland Park (Pickup)

Highland Park (Pulled Sign)

Highland Park (Sad Popcorn)Highland Park P.O.

Highland Park P.O.

Los Angeles (DGA Garage)

Los Angeles (Scottish Rite)

New York City (Queens Elevated)

Oaxaca (Jewelry)

Oaxaca (M. Bravo 2)

Santa Barbara (Helena)

Santa Barbara (Jelly Face)

Torino (Via S. Massimo)

Aubeterre-Sur-Drone (Wall)

Hidden Loop

Frog Town (Rust Stain)

Glassell Park (Leg Stain)

Highland Park (Ash Street)

Highland Park (Bad Stray)

Highland Park (Curb)

Highland Park (Factory Wall)

Little Tokyo (Manhole)

Los Angeles (Bates Ave)

Los Angeles (Cyprus Park)

Los Angeles (Highland Park Sidewalk)

Los Angeles (Vine St. Shadow)

New York (P.S. 1)

Oaxaca (Banditos)

Oaxaca (M. Bravo)

Oaxaca (M.G. Vigil)

Oaxaca (P. Diaz)

Portland (Oak St)

Venezia (Rabbit)

Los Angeles (The Dancer)

Highland Park (Loops)

Los Angeles (The Geisha)

Highland Park (Pickup Bed)

New York City (89th Street) #2

New York City (We Kill Ourselves)

Chinatown (Phone Booth Boy)

Los Angeles (Pink Rectangle)

Highland Park (Devourer)

Chinatown (Electric Splatter)

Highland Park (Faded Emblem)
My photographs document urban ephemera on buildings, sidewalks, utility boxes, retaining walls and other surfaces I’ve encountered in New York, Los Angeles, Venice, Istanbul, Oaxaca and other cities I’ve lived in and visited over the last decade.
I’m fascinated by the way erosion and decay impact the physical world. In the natural environment, these forces are responsible for the landscapes we find most beautiful: mountain ranges, desert mesas, grand canyons, dramatic waterfalls and undulating coastlines. These same forces collaborate with human interventions to fashion profound beauty in built and urban landscapes: ragged and undulating shapes, clashes of color and light, familiar images upended, destroyed, nearly unrecognizable.