Integrative Thesis Project, The University of Michigan —

Self Portrait, full-color 3D print, 2”x3”

My thesis coursework addressed the relationship between social networks, our understanding of self, and the body’s relationship to space. I worked across media, both digital and 3D, to identify specific inquiries within the nebula of human-computer interaction, and to discover new applications of related concepts.


Home Office, wood paneling, miniature asphalt shingling, miniature bricks, concrete, full-color 3D print, 10”x14x12”



Hair House, wood panel, acrylic paint, synthetic hair, 8”x24”



Interface, wood studs, drywall, joint compoud, paint

My exhibited work, Interface, was a live-stream video installation which appeared to be embedded into the gallery wall. Viewers peered into a small window in the wall, to discover a live-stream video of themself which came from a surveillance camera and was being streamed to an iPad inside of the wall.

To created the illusion of deep space within the wall, I built a wood frame extension which capped onto the gallery wall. I built and inserted a long periscope into the extension, then treated the surfaces with drywall, paint, and joint compound to appear seamless.
Click for video

in[Arch], The University of California, Berkeley —







The in[Arch] coursework began as an iterative sequence of designed elemental objects which were informed by a series of projective cuts and material shifts. These objects established a visual language which came to define the unique properties of each student’s project and informed the combination of the objects into a combined singular form. Finally, a program of a folly and bathroom, as well as a location were introduced.