
Become a Studio Patron Heading
The Threshold of Witnessing
Every journey has its threshold.
Every threshold has its witness.
Here, art is not finished, is alive—here, silence is loud.
The majestic grandeur of the absence of guile.
To become a Studio Patron is to step into the process: to see through the narrow eye, to hold space for the wild, the raw, and the real.
No, impassible. Nothing’s impossible.
We are all a little mad here—mad enough to believe there is more to it than what we see, in art as resistance, in the power of presence, the narrative of the objects, the loud whisper
This is not a donation.
This is an alliance—an act of refusal, a contract of becoming.
You are not a spectator. You are the witness, the co-conspirator,
the part of the story that refuses to be erased.
Sometimes I’ve believed many impossible things before breakfast.
To be a Patron is to believe in one more: that art can make us tangible, that witness is a form of creation.
What You Receive:
- Early glimpses of new work—before the world sees
- Intimate, behind-the-keyhole process journals and digital sketchbook pages
- Your support becomes credit—invested, not lost—toward art that calls to you (or calls you to become)
- Invitations to private showings, unfinished pieces, or secret sales and bids.
- A place in the credits of future work—named as a witness, a patron, an accomplice in crime, a friend.
Support is not silence.
Witnessing is not passive.
To become a Studio Patron is to say:
I was here. I refused to look away

Not quite open—yet. The keyhole glimmers
FAQ / How It Works
What is a Studio Patron?
A witness, a supporter, a name written in the margins of becoming.
Someone who believes in impossible things, who shows up for the journey.
What do I receive?
Early access, exclusive process, and a credit that grows with every month—yours to claim in art, now or later.
Sometimes a secret, sometimes a surprise, always a piece of the adventure.
How do I join?
Step through the keyhole. Choose your level. Become part of the process.
Can I leave?
Yes. Your credit remains—a trace of your presence, a thank you for believing.
Every witness leaves a mark.
Every mark is a memory.
