This collection of images as prints explores a modern Caribbean aesthetic and examines the Caribbean identity shaped by modern sensibilities. Each vignette highlights the virtues of everyday people exercising their humanity in the mundane tempo of their local context. During these brief moments glimpse the infinite and experience the sublime.

  • The twelve (12) selected images form part of an ongoing inquiry into the visual architecture of memory and digital perception in the Caribbean. Using original photographs as source material, each spontaneously captured image has been digitally deconstructed to amplify contrast, saturation, and luminance that reveal alternate colour stories within contemporary Caribbean environments.

    The manipulation process is guided by the artist’s worked concept of Image as Field, a method that treats flattened images not as representations, but as virtually expanded zones shaped by technological influence on a people and the aesthetic conditions of modern life.

    Each subject’s posture and presence is suspended in a moment of charged stillness—revealing symbolic tension beneath visual ease. The resulting images offer layered, speculative portraits of internal states: glimpses of rest, resignation, and soft resistance captured by an invisible witness.

  • Exploring Charge in Image as Field Through an Appropriated Colour Theorem

    In my digital media work, I explore the Shimmer Effect, using an appropriated colour theorem as an applied optical effect to investigate the dynamics of charge within the concept of Image as Field. The Shimmer Effect manifests as an optical illusion, where colour shifts and vibrations occur across the visual spectrum, creating a dynamic interplay between light, perception, and the charged energy of the image. The effect takes different shape in media applications and surface design experiments.

    This effect is rooted in an established colour theory, adapted to emphasize how visual elements, when combined with a certain intensity of light or movement, can create a sense of heightened presence or energy. Within the context of Image as Field, this approach interrogates how media images are not static, but rather fields of charge—dynamic, responsive, and ever-changing, influenced by the viewer's interaction and the technological forces shaping the visual experience.

    The optical shift within the Shimmer Effect isn’t just about visual allure but also represents a deeper engagement with the medium. The charged interaction between the image and the viewer speaks to how modern media formats influence cultural identity, and how the image, as a living field, moves beyond mere representation to become a part of the viewer’s perception.

    By appropriating and adapting the colour theorem, I aim to push the boundaries of traditional digital media, asking how colour and charge can be used to reframe our understanding of digital image creation. In doing so, the Shimmer Effect acts as both a technical exploration and a conceptual inquiry—illuminating how the field of digital media is not just a passive space but one actively charged by its internal forces and the cultural context that shapes its interpretation.