Found Flowers

Floral portraits from the San Francisco Breast Cancer Memorial Garden

I paint to prolong memory.

These floral portraits begin in places shaped by love and loss—memorial and healing gardens where someone has quietly left a flower beside a name. This series starts with a real bloom found on-site at the San Francisco Breast Cancer Memorial Garden. I sketch from life, and then return to the studio to let watercolor deepen what the eye saw and the heart held.

I’m drawn to the flowers that lean—toward a plaque, a bench, a quiet dedication. Not the most perfect or symmetrical, but the ones holding presence. Each is a witness. A companion. A flicker of life still tethered to a name we don’t want to forget.

There’s a beauty in that complexity. As one breast cancer survivor put it, “more complex, a bit ravaged, but beautiful in its own way.” That’s what these paintings try to honor—not just what blooms, but what endures.

To support continued research and care, 10% of all proceeds from these pieces and their prints will be donated to the Susan G. Komen Foundation.

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