D(L)iminal Man, Photography Based Biological Imaging Portraits

Portraits created through photography-based biological imaging, where color negatives are selectively masked and buried in soil for extended periods, allowing natural decomposition processes to transform the photographic emulsion. The figures show complex layered effects from underground processing: areas of intense coral and crimson coloration where chemical reactions occurred, creamy yellow-white regions indicating mineral deposits, scattered black voids where emulsion has been completely consumed, and emerald green patches suggesting microbial growth. The surfaces are punctuated by numerous circular holes and bubble-like formations of varying sizes, creating a honeycomb or cellular texture throughout the portraits. Some figures display horn-like projections, spinal extensions, or mutation-like formations that suggest post-human transformation or exposure to unknown compounds that cause bodily metamorphosis and tissue alteration.

This unconventional photographic process surrenders artistic control to the collaborative forces of soil chemistry, microorganisms, moisture, and time, resulting in a meditation on identity, mortality, and natural transformation. The works embrace the poetry of impermanence and the unexpected aesthetics that emerge from decay, while simultaneously evoking speculative narratives of transhuman evolution or biohazardous mutation.

By allowing nature to become an active collaborator in the creative process, each piece becomes a meditation on mortality, the fragility of identity, and our inevitable return to the earth. The unpredictable results challenge conventional notions of photographic control and perfection, celebrating instead the serendipitous forms that arise when human artifice meets natural process—forms that might equally suggest archaeological specimens or evidence of exposure to transformative agents.

Each biologically processed portrait functions as a unique archaeological artifact—a relic of the self that has been claimed, transformed, and returned by the elemental forces of the natural world. They speak to our shared vulnerability and the profound interconnectedness between human identity and the living earth that ultimately reclaims us all, while playfully invoking imagery of dystopian metamorphosis and the fragile boundary between human and post-human existence.

Family Tree - 2024, 60 x78 inches
Experimental photograph featuring scattered human forms across unified rust-colored field created through extended biological imaging processes. Multiple silhouettes show diverse organic decay states and mineral staining effects, representing temporal genealogical progression with fossil-like surface deterioration and continuous chemical oxidation.
Family Tree -Part 2, 2024, 60 x78 inches

D(L)iminal Man, Biologically Processed (Self)-Portraits 2014-2016

Pigment Prints, 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches  and  20 1/2 x 16 inches 

Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing with soil burial and selective masking. Portrait displays abstracted features through biological decomposition effects, mineral staining, and microbial activity creating complex earthy textures and oxidation patterns over extended incubation period.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2015, #1, 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches, 56 1/2 x 43 1/2 inches
Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing with extended soil burial. Portrait displays dark facial silhouette surrounded by diverse biological effects including fiery chemical reactions, verdant organic growth, oxidized formations, and silvery mineral deposits with areas of complete material consumption.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2015, #2, 20 1/2 x 16 inches, 82 1/2 x 63 1/2 inches
Biologically-processed photographic artwork.Silhouette displays triumphant pose with luminous aureate border and multicolored biological transformations including emerald growth, crimson reactions, and azure mineral deposits from earthbound decomposition processes.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2016, #1, 20 1/2 x 16 inches inches
Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing showing profile with celestial gaze. Figure exhibits complex biological transformations including honeycomb textures, scarlet chemical alterations, ivory mineral accumulations, and verdant organic growth from earthbound decomposition processes.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2014, #4, 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing showing profile with dramatic material consumption. Figure exhibits complex biological transformations including scarlet chemical alterations, golden mineral accumulations, verdant organic growth, and sculptural void formations from earthbound decomposition processes.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2014, #1, 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing showing profile with elemental color transitions. Figure exhibits cobalt crystalline formations, scarlet chemical flows, ivory mineral accumulations, and sculptural void formations from earthbound decomposition processes and biological intervention.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2015, #3, 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing showing frontal figure dissolved into chemical activity. Composition exhibits golden formations, crimson oxidation, verdant organic growth, and honeycomb textures from earthbound decomposition processes creating cosmic-like biological landscape.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2014, #3, 13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
Self-portrait on color negative film created through biological imaging with soil burial process. Frontal torso view shows extensive decomposition effects including rust oxidation, emerald microbial growth, azure chemical reactions, and cellular bubble formations with visible film frame markings and prismatic background effects.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2016, #2, 20 1/2 x 16 inches inches
Self-portrait created through biological imaging with buried color negative showing frontal bust amid explosive decomposition effects. Image displays intense crimson and golden formations with volcanic-like eruptions, black voids, emerald microbial growth, and flame-like organic projections from extended soil processing.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2015, #4, 20 1/2 x 16 inches inches
Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing showing frontal figure in creamy whites with dark biological specimens. Composition exhibits cellular mapping effects, scattered organic islands with crimson chemical reactions, and translucent atmospheric background from earthbound decomposition processes.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2015, #5, 20 1/2 x 16 inches inches
Self-portrait created through biological imaging with buried color negative showing frontal bust with upward gaze amid intense decomposition. Image displays fiery reds, golden yellows, and black voids from chemical reactions with extensive cellular texturing and honeycomb-like perforations from extended soil processing.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2015, #6, 20 1/2 x 16 inches inches
Self-portrait on color negative film created through biological imaging showing frontal bust with internal luminosity effect. Image displays intense crimson and golden coloration with black organic flows, metallic chemical reactions, and sculptural voids from extended soil burial processing creating molten appearance.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2015, #7, 20 1/2 x 16 inches inches
Experimental self-portrait produced via subterranean photographic processing on film stock showing frontal figure with luminous aureate corona. Composition exhibits vibrant organic transformation including orange chemical alterations, verdant biological growth, ebony material consumption, and celestial radiance effects from earthbound decomposition creating transcendent appearance.
Biologically Processed Self-Portrait 2016, #3, 20 1/2 x 16 inches inches