Midnight Hummingbird & The Howling Wolf
Acrylic on Canvas
24″ x 18″
Winter Bear & The Hummingbird
Acrylic on Canvas
20″ x 24″
Feeling Lucky
Acrylic on Canvas
16″ x 20″
The Wolf and The Otter
Acrylic on Canvas
The Wild West
Diamond Resin Series Limited Edition
A true warrior is not defined merely by physical strength or sharp instincts. A warrior cultivates his mind to align with his spirit, gaining the vision to see beyond the illusions of the world. From the perspective of a lone warrior, his enemies stand before him, yet he does not falter. With unwavering resolve, he sings his death song, fully embracing his fate.
When overrun by the enemy, the Dog Soldiers did not retreat in fear. Instead, they would stake their sashes into the ground with an arrow, a final act of defiance and dedication. They sang their way home to the Creator, ensuring a good death—a death marked by courage, selflessness, and service to the people. For in warrior traditions, death is not an end but merely a transition, as much a part of the eternal cycle as birth.
Fear has no place in the warrior’s heart, for it is seen as an illusion. Each challenge, each trial, is a part of the spiritual journey, guiding the warrior through this physical realm toward higher understanding. Every fate encountered is an opportunity to transcend, fulfilling one’s sacred purpose as spiritual beings walking this earth.
Geronimo
Diamond Resin Series Limited Edition
Apache warriors are honored for the courage of their nations which fought with unparalleled bravery against the United States between 1849 and 1886, when Geronimo surrendered, and to a lesser extent for another 38 years after. The tendrils of lightning encasing the warriors are a depiction of how the first peoples saw the lethal power of gunfire that struck men dead with a thunderous flash. The serpent with the many tentacles strangling Geronimo and piercing through the skin of the Apache warriors depicts the mass genocide inflicted by the US.
The Apache helicopter, the most lethal helicopter in the world, was named after the Apache Warriors for their ferocity in battle. Some of the weapons used by the Apache warriors have been adopted by the US military such as the Tomahawk and several combat knives. And as early as 1940, American paratroopers of all ancestries adopted “Geronimo” as a battle cry for jumping into combat.
Today the Apache warrior tradition continues as a proud and disproportionate number of patriotic Apache men and women who serve in the American military. For this reason the red, white, and blue of the American flag appears in the background—a flag countless Apache veterans have heroically fought under for nearly a century.
The Apache Wars
Diamond Resin Series Limited Edition
A true warrior is not defined merely by physical strength or sharp instincts. A warrior cultivates his mind to align with his spirit, gaining the vision to see beyond the illusions of the world. From the perspective of a lone warrior, his enemies stand before him, yet he does not falter. With unwavering resolve, he sings his death song, fully embracing his fate.
When overrun by the enemy, the Dog Soldiers did not retreat in fear. Instead, they would stake their sashes into the ground with an arrow, a final act of defiance and dedication. They sang their way home to the Creator, ensuring a good death—a death marked by courage, selflessness, and service to the people. For in warrior traditions, death is not an end but merely a transition, as much a part of the eternal cycle as birth.
Fear has no place in the warrior’s heart, for it is seen as an illusion. Each challenge, each trial, is a part of the spiritual journey, guiding the warrior through this physical realm toward higher understanding. Every fate encountered is an opportunity to transcend, fulfilling one’s sacred purpose as spiritual beings walking this earth.