Found Art — Street Scenes, Texture, and Everyday Details
The Found Art collection explores the unintentional and informal creativity that appears in public spaces. These are not curated installations—they’re moments shaped by people moving through cities, leaving marks, or making do with what’s around them.
This body of work includes graffiti walls in Chicago, San Diego, and Ho Chi Minh City, as well as images of protest damage, vandalism, and spontaneous visual commentary. Some pieces were created to be seen; others were likely never meant as art at all—arrangements of discarded items, scrawled notes, or objects left behind that take on a new meaning through context and composition.
You’ll also find quiet sidewalk scenes, fading layers of old signage, painted curbs, and scribbles—each one a small, unspoken conversation. The photos often show everyday people walking or driving by, unaware of the visual language surrounding them. In that quiet contrast, there’s humor, symbolism, and raw expression.
This is a partial view of a broader archive. Reach out to explore more images or inquire about specific prints or series.