Inetnon Lalåhi — Guam Museum 2025

Hagåtña, Guam

Contributed original artwork to Inetnon Lalåhi (A Gathering of Men), a landmark exhibition at the Guam Museum's Cafe Gallery in Hagåtña. The show brought together over 25 indigenous, diaspora, and local male artists exploring identity, masculinity, and CHamoru culture through the lens of Inafa'måolek — the value of mutual care and harmony.

A first-of-its-kind gathering on island, the exhibition highlighted artists as fathers, advocates, and cultural pillars — a celebration of what it means to be a man rooted in Pacific heritage.

Death March 20k

White T-shirt with a graphic and text related to the 20K Walk/Run Death March event, including a mountain illustration and marching figures.

On Guam, 5K race shirts are everywhere. Everyone knows the format — bold event name, illustrative graphic, finisher energy.

This design borrows that language to carry something heavier.

In July 1944, nearly 22,000 CHamoru civilians were forced at bayonet point from their homes and marched into concentration camps in the Manenggon Valley. One of the most traumatic chapters in CHamoru history — and one most people outside Guam have never heard of.

Death March 20K looks like a race shirt. Until it doesn't.

Artshow
Inetnon Lalåhi" (A Gathering of Men)

Year
July - August 2025

Wish you
Weren’t Here

Collection of vintage-style greeting postcards with the word 'WERE' in large letters, featuring coastal and beach scenes and the text 'Wish you weren't, greetings from Targuie Beach!'

The "Wish You Were Here" postcard is one of the most familiar images in travel — warm colors, bold lettering, a place worth missing.

Tarague Beach on Guam was exactly that. Sacred. Beautiful. And taken.

The U.S. Air Force has used the beach for open burning and detonation of hazardous military munitions — bombs and rockets detonated directly on the sand, releasing toxins that contaminate the land, air, and the aquifer that supplies drinking water to most of the island. CHamoru people can't even access it.

Wish You Weren't Here flips the postcard. Same warm tones, same vintage lettering. But look closer — a skull sits inside the type. The stamp. The airmail border. All of it reframed.

You're not being invited. You're being shown what was lost.

Artshow
Inetnon Lalåhi" (A Gathering of Men)

Year
July - August 2025