Portrait of The Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson
This portrait captures the contemplative strength and spiritual depth of the Rebbe. Rendered with layered texture and controlled light, the composition emphasizes stillness, wisdom, and quiet authority. The piece invites reflection and connection, making it a meaningful presence in any space.
The Morning After Starry Night
This painting captures the comedown after creation. The canvas of Starry Night beside him vibrates with movement and light, thick, alive, electric. In contrast, his expression is emptied out, almost hollow, as if the work took everything.
He sits on a narrow bed inside the asylum, one ear visible, shoulders slightly collapsed. There is no sky in the room. No swirling night. Only walls. The masterpiece was painted from memory.
The energy lives on the canvas. The cost remains with the artist.
Exhale the Scream
Inspired by The Scream by Edvard Munch, his reimagining of The Scream retains the intensity of color and motion, but shifts the narrative. The central figure no longer dissolves into panic. With hands pressed to chest and abdomen, he is mid-breath, grounding rather than unraveling.
The emotion turns inward. What once read as collapse now reads as regulation: a body choosing control inside chaos. The landscape roars. The figure steadies.
Girl with the Missing Pearl Earring
Inspired by Girl with a Pearl Earring by Johannes Vermeer, this piece imagines the moment after the pose. One pearl earring remains. The other is gone. It's the moment she realizes her earring is missing.
Her expression is no longer quiet mystery, but sudden realization.
Beit Hamikdash Sunset
This painting presents the Beit HaMikdash in monumental symmetry, columns aligned, steps centered, light erupting from above. The structure is rendered in cool stone blues and creams, grounded and architectural. Behind it, the sky ignites in gold.
The contrast is deliberate. The building stands ordered and precise, while the heavens move with energy and fire. A glow burns at the entrance, drawing the eye inward.
The work balances permanence and transcendence, stone below, radiance above.
Robe Life Sisters
This painting captures the pure joy of two sisters seeing each other after living in different countries. Standing on a hotel balcony in white robes, towels twisted high on their heads, and oversized sunglasses, they pause to take in the view over the balcony and photograph a permanent memory.
The moment is not lost on them. One leans into composure, the other into laughter. The sunlight, greenery, and open air frame a reunion that feels both indulgent and deeply earned.
Luxury is present, but the real subject is connection.
Tower of David and Old City Jerusalem
This work captures the layered stone architecture of Jerusalem’s Old City, centered on the Tower of David. Repeating arches, fortified walls, and terraced greenery create a rhythm of structure and depth.
The palette is restrained, warm limestone against soft sky blues and measured greens, emphasizing permanence over drama. The composition moves horizontally, guiding the eye across arches, stairways, and courtyards.
The painting focuses on endurance: stone shaped by centuries, still standing in quiet light.
Frida Kahlo Portrait
This portrait distills Frida Kahlo into line, symmetry, and controlled intensity. The pink striped ground creates vertical tension, while the dark red linework against the negative space carves her features with clarity and restraint.
The composition is graphic and declarative, less romantic, more emblematic and iconic rather than anecdotal.