1 April to 30 June, 2025
The Club, Regina, Sk
This collection of nineteen pieces explores the complexities of self-expression and social dynamics, focusing on themes of acceptance, shame, sexuality, voyeurism, and judgment in an era when social media largely influences how people connect and interact.
Using a palette of bright playful colors juxtaposed with bold, provocative figures, the works highlight the delicate yet striking tension between vulnerability and intimacy. Each piece invites the viewer to reflect on the layers of identity within the societal frameworks that influence how others express themselves and how we perceive them as casual observers.
Arches are a common recurring motif in the works, symbolizing doorways— the metaphorical separation between inner and outer, between public and private. The playful aesthetic of pastel tones and other dreamlike elements intentionally contrast with the raw style and substance of the illustrations, challenging social norms and embracing contradiction in order to reveal beauty. Through this exploration, the exhibition celebrates the perception of individuality while questioning the judgments faced in the act of self-expression.
This Body is Sponsored Content:
Autonomy, Exploitation, and the Algorithmic Striptease of Digital Flesh


The intent of Erase Your Browser History and Destroy Your Phone as an exhibition is neither to exploit nor objectify the female-presenting form. Rather, this collection seeks to celebrate the rebellious undercurrent present in individuals who use social media as a means of self-expression. In a digital landscape where validation and visibility often hinge on the performative, this work examines how those who engage with platforms like Instagram, TikTok and OnlyFans navigate the gap between empowerment and commodification.
By harnessing their own power- the very aspects of their identity that external forces might seek to exploit- these individuals reclaim agency over their image, redirecting it into a state of hyperrealistic, sexualized ownership. This act of self-representation challenges traditional notions of who controls the narrative of the body in the digital age. Social media provides a space where users can construct and curate their own identities, yet it also fosters an economy of validation that blurs the line between autonomy and external approval. This exhibition interrogates this paradox: when does self-presentation become a radical assertion of control, and when does it veer into self-exploitation under the weight of audience expectation?
Erase Your Browser History and Destroy Your Phone also acknowledges the complexities of online erotic labor. Platforms like OnlyFans and Fansly have reshaped the relationship between performer and consumer, granting creators more control over their content while still existing within a system that demands engagement, monetization, and perpetual visibility. Here, body ownership is not just about self-expression but also about survival within the gig economy that often forces individuals to oscillate between self-empowerment and systemic reliance.
Erase Your Browser History and Destroy Your Phone does not seek to pass judgment but rather to amplify and explore the voices of those who consciously navigate and inhabit these digital spaces, embracing their own sexual agency while challenging the structures that seek to define, regulate, or commodify their existence. The work ultimately raises critical questions: In an era where self-exposure can be both a weapon and a vulnerability, how do we distinguish between autonomy and coercion? What does it mean to reclaim one’s image when the gaze, whether validating or exploitative, always lingers?


Happy rabbits and bad habits, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on plywood
12” x 12”

$100.00
Love sick, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on plywood
12” x 12”

$100.00
Play pretty for baby, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on plywood
12” x 12”

$100.00
Sad girls por vida, 2024
acrylic and pastel on plywood
12” x 12”

SOLD

Scraped knees and split lips, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on plywood
12” x 12”

SOLD
Skinny neck hex, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on plywood
12” x 12”

SOLD
Come out of the forest at night on your birthday, 2025
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
18” x 18”

$200.00
Fet vids and elephant graveyards, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
18” x 18”

SOLD
I found a knife dangling from your face, 2025
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
18” x 18”

$200.00
My aesthetic, 2025
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
18” x 18”

SOLD
Rotten thoughts, brave fronts, and absolute untruths, 2025
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
18” x 18”

SOLD
Sad sex and clumsy tongues, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
18” x 18”

$200.00
Bad dreams of worse names, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
24” x 24”

$300.00
Do you still hate me?, 2025
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
24” x 24”

$300.00
Half remembered music from the worst day of my life, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
24” x 24”

$300.00
Her vibe is so like whatever, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
24” x 24”

$300.00
Love goes tisk, tisk, tisk, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
24” x 24”

$300.00
Pretty teeth, 2024
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
24” x 24”

$300.00
Sleeping, or fucking, or something, 2025
acrylic, enamel, and pastel on canvas
24” x 24”

$300.00
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