“This sculpture is a dream realised—a shape that I can only pin to one thing: the graceful flight of the Kingfisher. Inspired by these elegant birds swooping through the British canal system on a blissful summer's day. Having spent a lot of time living on the canal, I grew increasingly fond of the Kingfisher’s effortless elegance. Their flight, their precision, and their quiet power are all reflected in this avionic form.
The Scorpion is a handcrafted sculpture that merges nature’s ingenuity with the sleek aesthetics of avionic & space-age design. Its form draws subtle inspiration from the scorpion—a creature perfectly designed for life on land. This grounded predator finds itself reimagined as a spacecraft-inspired creation. In space, form doesn’t need to follow the rules of function—it’s free to simply captivate. The Scorpion takes that freedom and runs with it, transforming an Earth-bound creature into something that feels at home among the stars. It’s a piece that celebrates the unexpected connections between nature and design, inviting you to pause, tilt your head, and wonder: why not let a scorpion take flight?
Thunder Bird is an imagined evolution of flight. A seamless fusion of eagle and aircraft, shaped as if nature itself had designed a jet. Its streamlined form sweeps forward into a poised, beak-like nose, with surfaces that flow like muscle and metal in unison. Every contour suggests speed and precision, not in mimicry of either creature or machine, but as the natural outcome of both. In Thunder Bird , the predator’s spirit and the engineer’s vision meet in one pure, aerodynamic silhouette.
A form that came to me in my sleep.