
Memoriam
Memoriam is an expansion of the series Kith & Kin, a series of illustrations about Peehee Mu’huh (Thacker Pass), Nevada. ​Currently, Peehee Mu’huh is being excavated, and will become the largest open pit lithium mine in North America. The silvery white element is a primary ingredient in the batteries needed to electrify the world. A transition away from fossil fuels is, on the surface, a noble and necessary effort. But digging deeper, one would find the highly extractive processes required to obtain lithium are not as “clean” as is advertised.
This delicate high desert sagebrush steppe ecosystem has been home to many unique creatures for millennia. It is the ancestral homeland of the Shoshone-Paiute people, serving as a hunting and burial ground, obsidian collection site, and a corridor for travel. Two massacres of the Shoshone-Paiute people have occurred here, and are remembered by this landscape.
Memoriam deviates from early iterations of the project. Originally, drawings of the residents of Peehee Mu’huh were steeped in the style of scientific illustration, influenced by coursework in college as an Environmental Studies major. Over time, they became more interpretive, decorative mosaic portraits. Most recently, these portraits employ memory and imagination, rather than live or photo references.
Memory is a means to talk about absence and what lives on inside of us. The disruption of the landscape and the erasure of uniquely adapted cultures of Peehee Mu’huh is explored through negative space. Memoriam invites you to reflect on the rapidly developing and changing world, and to grieve the losses underway. It also is an invitation to celebrate the many colorful, animated residents of Peehee Mu’huh.

Jocose Jacks
22x30”
Acrylic paint pen on paper
2025



Eternal Owl
22x30”
Acrylic paint pen on paper
2025




Ghost Grouse
22x30”
Acrylic paint pen on paper
2025



Ghost Pronghorn
18x24” (diptych)
Acrylic paint pen on paper
2025


Lahontan Cutthroat Ghosts
9x12”
Acrylic paint pen on paper
2025
