All my work centers around painting as performance, as an act that brings with it the artist’s whole body.

My photographs involve a performance for the camera. I paint directly on my skin, and then photograph myself and print the image on cotton rag paper. In the final images, my body isn’t exactly visible. It’s there, but not there, as the painting takes over.

My canvases also begin with a performative process. I dip my torso into liquid paint and then rub it down the side of the canvas. It’s a simple movement that I repeat across the surface. I’m looking for a sense of rhythm in the marks.

In Chinese painting, it’s not so much the marks you look at, as the way the energy moves around those marks. That space is empty, empty but full. If I think of my big marks as traces of myself, then maybe what I’m doing is emptying out. I'm looking for what happens in the flow around me – and seeing painting as a dynamic, a form of energy, a Movement Score.