Be Who You Have Become is the final painting I completed in 2025, and it carries the weight and clarity of a threshold piece. It began as an earlier work from my I Am Here series titled I Was Here. During the winter, when I couldn’t afford new canvas but still needed to paint, I chose to build directly on top of it. That decision became symbolic: I was rewriting my own history with the layers of who I had become. The past wasn’t erased — it became structure.
The embedded phrase “Everything is a foundation” sits at the heart of this work. I believe that every experience, every season of intensity, every moment of pressure becomes part of our architecture. Nothing is wasted. The painting’s dense, city‑like lattice reflects that idea — a visual map of how identity forms through accumulation, collapse, rebuilding, and emergence.
Color plays its own role in the narrative. The deep blacks create a grounding void, a space where memory and possibility coexist. Turquoise threads act as pathways — the color of clarity, communication, and forward movement. The oranges and reds pulse with momentum and urgency, symbolizing the heat of transformation. Yellow marks appear like small illuminations, moments of insight breaking through the density. Together, these colors create a rhythm of tension and release, mirroring the emotional cadence of becoming.
The symbology is layered but intentional. The grid suggests architecture, but also containment — the structures we inherit and the ones we outgrow. The overlapping marks echo the way stories accumulate, sometimes neatly, sometimes chaotically. The embedded words “Be Who You Are” and “Become” serve as quiet directives, not just to myself but to anyone standing in front of the piece. They’re reminders that identity is not a fixed point but an unfolding.
Painting over I Was Here turned the past into scaffolding. Finishing this piece as the last work of 2025 turned that scaffolding into identity. Be Who You Have Become invites viewers to see their own evolution in its layers — to recognize how their strongest foundations were often formed in difficult seasons, and to step fully into the person they’ve already become.