Analog woodcuts of broken digital displays create a deliberate counter movement to digital image culture.
The Lockdown Woodcuts translate damaged digital displays into the slow, resistant medium of woodcut. Broken screens, cracks and glitches become carved structures and printed systems.
The works are unique prints on handmade paper. They use the historical, physical resistance of woodcut as an analog response to digital image culture and to a moment of technological and social interruption.
A second group extends the prints through gouache and overpainting, turning the printed matrix into a field of painterly intervention.
Mediumwoodcut on handmade paper
Formatunique prints, each 78 x 107 cm
Extensionwoodcut and gouache on handmade paper







Overpainted woodcuts
A separate group of unique prints extends the woodcut process through gouache and painterly intervention.
Mediumwoodcut and gouache on handmade paper
Formatunique prints, each 78 x 107 cm


