The visual system for Auckland’s Arthropod Museum was built to spark curiosity and open up the world of arthropods to all kinds of explorers - whether you’re a researcher or just stepping in for the first time.
Inspired by the structure and symbolism of spider webs, the design centres around a modular “pod” shape - evolving into a flexible toolkit that adapts across mediums, levels of expertise, and individual interpretations. At the forefront is the idea of a visual epicenter: a starting point for endless paths of discovery. From the Arachnid Type Kit to the sphere of pods diagram, every element is designed to hold complexity while staying open to play. Like the webs that inspired it, this system is intricate, resilient, and built for users to make their own way through the arthropod world.
Series created for Daylight Skateboards explores the layered relationship between the natural history of Aotearoa and the digital age. These are visual conversations - pixelated ecosystems, calling attention to what we preserve and what we digitize. The work reflects on our need to bridge organic heritage with technological evolution, grounding the future in the patterns of the past.
Party on the Hill is a collaborative project shaped by a friend group immersed in skateboarding. While skateboarding was the core,it naturally expanded into clothing, music,graffiti- whatever felt honest at the time. It became a shared space to create, document and play without needing to fit into anything but our own rhythm.