


Left-brain vs. Right-brain
Left-brain vs. Right-brain
24x24 – Acrylic, Enamel, & Spray Paint on Canvas
Dubes, 2025
This piece is a visual hypothesis: that the brain is not a battleground but a spectrum—a waveform oscillating between precision and perception. The canvas splits not into conflict, but into complementarity.
On the right, geometry and digital texture represent the computational rigor of the left hemisphere—language, logic, and linearity. On the left, fluid marbling flows like synaptic jazz, reflecting the right hemisphere’s gift for intuition, abstraction, and creative synthesis.
The boundary is deliberate—yet porous. This work invites us to consider that cognition, like light, may be both particle and wave. Two sides, one source.
Left-brain vs. Right-brain
24x24 – Acrylic, Enamel, & Spray Paint on Canvas
Dubes, 2025
This piece is a visual hypothesis: that the brain is not a battleground but a spectrum—a waveform oscillating between precision and perception. The canvas splits not into conflict, but into complementarity.
On the right, geometry and digital texture represent the computational rigor of the left hemisphere—language, logic, and linearity. On the left, fluid marbling flows like synaptic jazz, reflecting the right hemisphere’s gift for intuition, abstraction, and creative synthesis.
The boundary is deliberate—yet porous. This work invites us to consider that cognition, like light, may be both particle and wave. Two sides, one source.
Left-brain vs. Right-brain
24x24 – Acrylic, Enamel, & Spray Paint on Canvas
Dubes, 2025
This piece is a visual hypothesis: that the brain is not a battleground but a spectrum—a waveform oscillating between precision and perception. The canvas splits not into conflict, but into complementarity.
On the right, geometry and digital texture represent the computational rigor of the left hemisphere—language, logic, and linearity. On the left, fluid marbling flows like synaptic jazz, reflecting the right hemisphere’s gift for intuition, abstraction, and creative synthesis.
The boundary is deliberate—yet porous. This work invites us to consider that cognition, like light, may be both particle and wave. Two sides, one source.